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Day, Martha M.; And Others – Science Teacher, 1996
Discusses the training and preparation for the transition to block scheduling. Provides a summary of some of the aspects of the four-by-four block schedule and describes strategies employed to modify instruction and curriculum. Includes two sample interdisciplinary activities. (DDR)
Descriptors: Block Scheduling, Educational Change, Educational Strategies, Flexible Scheduling
Nickle, Melinda Nixon; And Others – Phi Delta Kappan, 1990
Four secondary teachers, long accustomed to working in isolation, joined forces to provide an interdisciplinary program with flexible scheduling and common planning periods. This article describes their school-within-a-school program, its acceptance by the Coalition of Essential Schools, and the program's benefits. A sidebar provides restructuring…
Descriptors: Flexible Scheduling, House Plan, Interdisciplinary Approach, School Organization
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Meister, Denise; Nolan, Jim, Jr. – Teachers College Record, 2001
Examined how high school teachers made meaning of a change process involving teamwork, interdisciplinary teaching, and block scheduling. Document analysis, observation, and interview data indicated that uncertainty and doubt were the pervading themes and had a critical effect on the teaching team's ability to move to interdisciplinary teaching.…
Descriptors: Block Scheduling, Curriculum Development, Interdisciplinary Approach, Secondary Education
Goloborod'ko, M.; Sokolova, F. – Soviet Education, 1977
Recommends that high school students be taught about interdisciplinary relationships among the sciences, specifically chemistry and physics. Explains how schools can coordinate class schedules and course content to complement learning in both sciences. (AV)
Descriptors: Chemistry, Comparative Education, Course Content, Educational Planning
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Cooper, Sylvia L. – Science Teacher, 1996
Examines the benefits of flexible scheduling and the initial steps used in exploring this approach. Discusses the problem of loss of instructional time and the use of an independent research period as a solution. Presents results from an external assessment, ACT score data, and CTBS scores. (DDR)
Descriptors: College Entrance Examinations, Educational Change, Educational Strategies, Evaluation Methods
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Hackmann, Donald G.; Shelley, Mack C., II – Planning and Changing, 2002
Provides a brief overview of historical trends in classroom instructional practices and explains the emergence of constructivist theory. Describes two instructional practices at the secondary level: curriculum integration and teaming. Reports findings of a case study examining one high school faculty's teaching practices while engaged in…
Descriptors: Block Scheduling, Case Studies, Constructivism (Learning), Curriculum Development
Spang-Thomsen, Borge – Francais dans le Monde, 1983
The problems encountered by a French teacher in a Danish experimental interdisciplinary secondary education program, and the solutions he tried, are examined. Among the problems were student and teacher prejudices, program articulation, and differences in work methods. (MSE)
Descriptors: Articulation (Education), Curriculum Design, Difficulty Level, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Grinsel, James G.; And Others – Southern Social Studies Journal, 1993
Describes the revised social studies curriculum at Wausau West High School (Wisconsin). Discusses interdisciplinary cooperation among teachers, team teaching, and emphasis on higher order thinking skills. Contends that flexible scheduling and varying class size contribute to the program's effectiveness. (CFR)
Descriptors: Course Content, Curriculum Development, Curriculum Evaluation, Educational Objectives
Colton, R. W. – 1981
Rural schools may have an advantage over urban schools in science teaching if sciences are perceived as means of exploring our surroundings, are presented as many viewpoints of one overall picture, and are taught in a form that deals with human situations. Collaboratively taught, rural science curricula can include study of agricultural ecology,…
Descriptors: Agricultural Production, Curriculum Development, Educational Change, Educational Needs
Plagman, Ralph; Pitner, Richard – 1969
This paper investigates the nature of social change and the special needs of youth, and innovation in the teaching of social studies at the secondary level. Drawing on curriculum experiments begun in 1967, a new social studies program of non-graded instructional modules was inaugurated in 1969 concentrating in 3 areas: 1) United States Realities,…
Descriptors: Classes (Groups of Students), Curriculum Development, Educational Change, Flexible Schedules