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Queen, J. Allen; Kaskey, Kimberly A. – Phi Delta Kappan, 1997
Developing a block schedule and surviving its first year of implementation require an open mind, a flexible spirit, and commitment. Discusses the basics of block scheduling; curricular alignment, course development, and unit design; pacing guides for time management; instruction strategies and lesson designs; classroom management; advanced…
Descriptors: Block Scheduling, Change Strategies, Educational Environment, Program Implementation
Salvaterra, Mary E.; Adams, Don C. – 1998
A study focused primarily on building-level leadership by observing how principals in 12 high schools (11 public and 1 Catholic) engaged in planning a structural change from a traditional schedule with 45-minute periods to the 90-minute periods of a block schedule. Using a concerns-based model of change, principals' behaviors and teachers'…
Descriptors: Administrator Behavior, Block Scheduling, Change Strategies, High Schools
West, Mike – 1996
As of 1996, Chaparral High School in Las Vegas, Nevada, was in the fourth year of a radical restructuring effort. The school changed from a 6-period day, composed of 51-minute periods, to an alternating day schedule, composed of 3 102-minute periods per day. This report describes how the school developed and implemented the new schedule. Faculty…
Descriptors: Alternate Day Schedules, Block Scheduling, Change Strategies, Curriculum Development
Lonardi, Emilie M. – School Administrator, 1998
An administrative team member/restructuring facilitator analyzes the failure of a block scheduling reform in a small, suburban district. The prevailing dynamics that obstructed success were fear of change, propagandizing of data, and a culture of complacency. These problems could have been avoided by training staff to work in longer periods,…
Descriptors: Block Scheduling, Central Office Administrators, Change Strategies, Failure
Wesson, Linda; Kudlacz, Jane Marie – Principal Leadership, 2000
Elements aiding block-scheduling implementation at an Ohio Catholic school include a supportive principal, systems thinking, adequate time and resources, benchmarks for quality, responsible faculty decision making, readiness-based staff development, democratic process, process/content coordination, a nonthreatening learning environment, and…
Descriptors: Block Scheduling, Catholic Schools, Change Strategies, College Faculty