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Meyer, Gwen – 2001
This booklet examines issues related to time in education. After describing the increasing number of roles teachers play in their schools and their lack of time to do everything, the booklet explains that in order to achieve improved student outcomes, teachers need time to do their work. Teaching requires time for professional development,…
Descriptors: Block Scheduling, Elementary Secondary Education, Flexible Scheduling, Planning

Tanner, Brenda; And Others – Journal of Staff Development, 1995
Secondary educators can create blocks of time for teachers and students to study and learn so teachers can enjoy professional growth opportunities without sacrificing students' instructional time. The article provides a scheduling plan, explaining how to modify schedules to offer teachers extended planning or development periods on a rotating…
Descriptors: Faculty Development, Flexible Scheduling, Planning, School Schedules

Kruse, Carol A.; Kruse, Gary D. – NASSP Bulletin, 1995
The master schedule determines instructional time, use of space, student grouping, and teacher role. Currently, secondary school buildings are used like factories, and teachers can spend an entire career in the same classroom. Traditional, intensified, and flexible block scheduling produces master schedules with greater flexibility, less…
Descriptors: Change Strategies, Educational Change, Educational Quality, Flexible Scheduling

Winn, Deanna D.; And Others – NASSP Bulletin, 1997
Describes a committee's efforts to revamp schedules to improve their high school's elective course options, provide equitable teacher-preparation time, and use instructional time productively. From three viable schedules (a four-period block, alternating-day schedule; a five-period trimester with a flexible period; and a modified trimester plan…
Descriptors: Alternate Day Schedules, Block Scheduling, Committees, Creativity
Irmsher, Karen – 1996
This digest examines problems inherent in the traditional school scheduling pattern. It offers block scheduling as an option and describes variations in block schedules. It then looks at the benefits and challenges of block scheduling and concludes with a few suggestions for making the transition. Proponents argue that block scheduling allows for…
Descriptors: Alternate Day Schedules, Educational Change, Elementary Secondary Education, Flexible Scheduling
Peyton, David – Directions in Language and Education, 1995
This report is an excerpt from the National Education Commission On Time and Learning Final Report, "Prisoners of Time," published in April, 1994. In it, the Commission concludes that the reform movement of the last decade is destined to founder unless it is able to harness more time, and better management thereof, for learning. The…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Extended School Day, Flexible Scheduling, Released Time
Livingston, JoAnne – 1994
In November 1994, the U.S. Department of Education invited a group of exceptional public and private school teachers (n=114) to Washington, D.C., to hear their thoughts and to explore ways in which the federal government can work with educators to achieve the National Education Goals. The teachers centered on two dimensions of the time challenge:…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Extended School Day, Flexible Scheduling, Instructional Effectiveness

Brett, Monroe – Social Education, 1996
Asserts that longer class periods must be approached and planned in a completely different manner than shorter periods. A 90-minute period requires a higher degree of teacher preparation and a critical focus on objectives and planning. Includes a summary of questions, predictions, and findings from teachers. (MJP)
Descriptors: Block Scheduling, Classroom Environment, Educational Planning, Flexible Scheduling
Adelman, Nancy E.; And Others – 1996
This study examines three aspects of educational time: (1) quantity of time in school; (2) quality of time in school; and (3) students' uses of out-of-school time. The study identified two types of strategies that altered school uses of time--multiage groupings, and flexible school schedules. It concludes that the decision to increase the quantity…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Extended School Day, Extended School Year, Flexible Scheduling
Policy Studies Associates, Inc., Washington, DC. – 1994
This report describes the research design of a study that identified and evaluated a collection of reforms designed to enhance learning by altering the amount of and/or the quality of time devoted to learning. The study focused on the quantity and quality of time that teachers and students spent in school and, to a lesser extent, students'…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Elementary Secondary Education, Extended School Day, Extended School Year
Funkhouser, Janie E.; And Others – 1995
A central theme in the history of American education in the 20th century is the expansion of formal schooling for more children. This literature review surveys the research on the educational uses of time, with a focus on the quantity and quality of time that teachers and students spent in school and, to a lesser extent, students' out-of-school…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Case Studies, Elementary Secondary Education, Extended School Day