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North Carolina End of Course…1
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Morris, Robert C. – Educational Planning, 2022
This article gives an historical perspective of block scheduling as well as looking squarely at the advantages and disadvantages of it. It focuses on how block scheduling affects such things as school climate, staff morale, and most importantly student achievement. Results from surveys given to administrators and students utilizing block…
Descriptors: Block Scheduling, Time on Task, Educational Environment, Teacher Morale
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Ellerbrock, Cheryl R.; Main, Katherine; Falbe, Kristina N.; Franz, Dana Pomykal – Education Sciences, 2018
The middle school concept, aimed at creating a more developmentally responsive learning environment for young adolescents, gained a stronghold in the later part of the 20th century. Proponents of this concept have argued continually for the holistic implementation of its six key characteristics if its benefits are to be realized. These…
Descriptors: Administrative Organization, Foreign Countries, Middle Schools, Middle School Students
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Murris, Karin; Haynes, Joanna – Global Education Review, 2020
Discourses and relations of child/adult and early education are super-permeated with ideas and practices of authority and boundary-making. In early years' practices, deeply important beliefs and assumptions about who or what has authority and who or what should create the boundaries of everyday activity often go unquestioned. This produces…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Teacher Education Programs, Foreign Countries, Early Childhood Teachers
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Calvo, Naomi; Miles, Karen Hawley – Educational Leadership, 2012
When schools face budget cuts, they too often cut seemingly nonessential services in an effort to keep existing structures intact. Calvo and Miles suggest that it might be better to rethink the existing structures and find ways to reallocate staff and instructional time. They examine two school that have taken this approach, focusing their efforts…
Descriptors: Teacher Effectiveness, Budgeting, Retrenchment, Charter Schools
Education Partnerships, Inc., 2012
Why do a trimester schedule? With the advent of block scheduling, many high schools conducted research on utilizing that plan in a trimester format. There appeared to be three issues that most schools faced: (1) How to provide substantive instructional time that was not fragmented?; (2) How does the school climate contribute positively to…
Descriptors: Educational Strategies, Teaching Methods, Block Scheduling, Trimester System
Triplett, Kimberly – Journal of Case Studies in Education, 2012
This is a narrative article, highlighting effective teaching strategies for teacher candidates at a four-year university in the South. The author examined preconceived negative notions teacher candidates expressed about being enrolled in a Math Block class and having to teach children about mathematics. After involving the teacher candidates in a…
Descriptors: Teacher Effectiveness, Educational Strategies, Preservice Teachers, Undergraduate Students
Complete College America, 2012
Navigating the complicated path through college can be a difficult task. The report analyses the problems students have on graduating on time--such as earning unnecessary credits--which costs them collectively billions of dollars and millions of hours each year. It also proposes a possible solution--Guided Pathways to Success (GPS), which can…
Descriptors: Time to Degree, School Guidance, College Students, College Credits
Scrivener, Susan; Weiss, Michael J.; Ratledge, Alyssa; Rudd, Timothy; Sommo, Colleen; Fresques, Hannah – MDRC, 2015
Community colleges offer a pathway to the middle class for low-income individuals. Although access to college has expanded, graduation rates at community colleges remain low, especially for students who need developmental (remedial) courses to build their math, reading, or writing skills. The City University of New York's (CUNY's) Accelerated…
Descriptors: Graduation Rate, Acceleration (Education), Associate Degrees, Developmental Studies Programs
Maltese, Adam V.; Dexter, Kirsten M.; Tai, Robert H.; Sadler, Philip M. – Science Educator, 2007
Using a national survey of more than 7,000 students from 128 different college introductory science courses, the authors compared students who experienced Block scheduling and Traditional scheduling in high school. (Contains 1 table and 2 figures.)
Descriptors: Scheduling, Block Scheduling, Science Instruction, Introductory Courses
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Kramer, Steven L.; Keller, Regina – Journal for Research in Mathematics Education, 2008
This "Brief Report" summarizes results from a study that investigated joint effects of two innovations adopted at a high school in an affluent suburban community in the northeast United States: 4 x 4 block scheduling and the "Standards"-based curriculum, the Interactive Mathematics Program (IMP).
Descriptors: Block Scheduling, Academic Standards, School Schedules, High Schools
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Shortt, Thomas L.; Thayer, Yvonne V. – NASSP Bulletin, 1997
High school block scheduling is in its earliest stages. Although time structures have changed, usage has not. Block schedules are threatened when curriculum standards and student mobility are ignored, courses are improperly sequenced, funding for increased personnel needs is inadequate, performing-arts instruction is not accommodated, and…
Descriptors: Block Scheduling, Flexible Scheduling, High Schools, Principals
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Randler, Christoph; Kranich, Konstanze; Eisele, Monika – Instructional Science: An International Journal of the Learning Sciences, 2008
In this study, we compared a traditional teaching sequence (four distinct lessons) with a block schedule dealing with the ecological adaptations of the water lily. The educational unit contained original plant material and both experimental groups received the same tasks and working sheets. Pupils worked together in groups of three to four pupils…
Descriptors: Experimental Groups, Block Scheduling, Educational Experiments, Biology
Rettig, Michael D.; Canady, Robert Lynn – School Administrator, 1999
Research reveals important generalizations about block scheduling. A/B schedules are easier to implement than 4/4 schedules, which must be adapted to allow some year-long courses. Merely changing the school bell schedule will not guarantee better student performance. However, block scheduling typically improves climate, attendance, and…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Block Scheduling, Educational Benefits, Educational Environment
Hackmann, Donald G. – Phi Delta Kappan, 2004
The student-centered learning practices associated with constructivism could benefit from the increased class time that block scheduling offers. But, in this article, the author observes, too often block scheduling is adopted as an end in itself, not as a tool to facilitate a specific pedagogical approach. The author expands on his observation in…
Descriptors: Secondary Education, Educational History, Time Blocks, Time Factors (Learning)
Hottenstein, David S. – School Administrator, 1999
Administrators must research diverse scheduling alternatives and their effects and requirements. Successfully modifying school time boils down to a six-step recipe: believing in improvement-directed change, involving all key stakeholders, selecting the appropriate schedule, developing clear expectations, bridging the theory-practice gap, and…
Descriptors: Administrator Responsibility, Block Scheduling, Flexible Scheduling, Guidelines
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