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Gabrieli, Chris – Educational Leadership, 2012
In a time of resource challenges, many educators see the cost of expanding learning time as a barrier. However, with at least 1,000 schools across the United States currently expanding learning time, data show that schools can implement the approach cost effectively. Expanded learning time schools manage three levers that both build quality…
Descriptors: Block Scheduling, Federal Programs, Partnerships in Education, Academic Achievement
The Interaction of School Organization and Classroom Dynamics: Factors Impacting Student Achievement
Ratcliff, Nancy J.; Pritchard, Nicholas A.; Knight, Caroline W.; Costner, Richard H.; Jones, Cathy R.; Hunt, Gilbert H. – Journal of Research in Education, 2014
Research was conducted to determine what impact school organization and classroom dynamics had on student achievement. Results from standardized benchmark tests found no significant differences in scores across all schools and content areas; yet, end of course standardized measures indicated that students in sites employing block scheduling…
Descriptors: School Organization, Classroom Environment, Academic Achievement, Scores
Joyner, Stacey; Molina, Concepcion; Beckwith, Shirley; Williams, Haidee – Texas Comprehensive Center, 2011
The impact of class time lengths on student achievement is a complex issue with multiple extraneous factors and without definitive answers. A major theme across many of the studies reviewed is that the amount of instructional time is not so important as how that time is spent. Key points include: (1) The commonly held conception that students in…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Time Factors (Learning), Time Management, Misconceptions
Childers, Gary L.; Ireland, Rebecca Weeks – Principal Leadership, 2005
In education, there is no one best way to do anything. There are compelling reasons why some courses should be taught in longer segments of time, which the block schedule provides. There are also compelling reasons why some classes should be taught in shorter segments. At Watauga High School in Boone, North Carolina, an alternative schedule that…
Descriptors: Principals, Block Scheduling, School Schedules, High Schools
Kubitschek, Warren N.; Hallinan, Maureen T.; Arnett, Stephanie M.; Galipeau, Kim S. – High School Journal, 2005
High school students who change their class schedules after the start of the school year may miss class time before their schedules are finalized. This loss of class time is expected to lead to a loss of learning opportunities, and thus to lower student achievement. We examine a school with an unexpectedly large number of such schedule changes.…
Descriptors: Block Scheduling, Time Management, High School Students, Academic Achievement
Brake, Nicholas L. – 2000
The hypothesis of this study was that student course-taking on the block schedules contributes to the comprehensive nature of the high school and the differentiated curriculum. Because of the shift of time associated with the block schedule, it was hypothesized that students would spend significantly less time studying the core academic…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Block Scheduling, Core Curriculum, Course Selection (Students)
Walker, Karen – Education Partnerships, Inc., 2005
Providing a high quality instructional program where the needs of students are met and preparing them for success in the world beyond the high school are paramount in developing a school's master schedule. Throughout the past, there have periodic movements to extend the school day and year in order to better meet these goals. What research has…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Time on Task, Time Factors (Learning), High Schools
North Carolina State Dept. of Public Instruction, Raleigh. Div. of Innovation and Development Services. – 1994
Since 1989, North Carolina has implemented several statewide initiatives to establish high expectations for all students. State educators have also paid increasing attention to the flexible use of time as a resource for expanding student learning. Block scheduling is a reorganization of school time that is increasingly being adopted by North…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Block Scheduling, Flexible Scheduling, High Schools
Walker, Karen – Education Partnerships, Inc., 2006
To use a block schedule or a traditional schedule? Which structure will produce the best and highest achievement rates for students? The research is mixed on this due to numerous variables such as: (1) socioeconomic levels; (2) academic levels; (3) length of time a given schedule has been in operation; (4) strategies being used in the classrooms;…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Block Scheduling, Scheduling, School Schedules
Arnold, Douglas E. – NASSP Bulletin, 2002
Block scheduling constitutes one of the major types of restructuring considered by school administrators seeking to improve student performance. The relationship between two school schedules--the seven-period A/B block and the seven-period traditional schedule--and achievement of students in grade 11 was examined. Comparisons showed no significant…
Descriptors: Block Scheduling, Statistical Analysis, Grade 11, Flexible Scheduling
Silva, Elena – Education Sector, 2007
This report examines both the educational and political dimensions of time reform. It presents the findings of a wide range of research on time reform, discusses the impact of various time reforms on the life of schools and beyond, and makes recommendations for policymakers about how to best leverage time in and out of school to improve student…
Descriptors: Time Management, Time Factors (Learning), Educational Policy, Academic Achievement
Tenney, Mark G. – 1998
This study discusses the outcomes of a survey of 23 educators from 19 high schools on a block schedule in New Hampshire. Educators from each school were asked their perceptions of the effects of the block schedule on students identified as having emotional/behavioral disorders and/or attention deficit-hyperactivity disorders (ADHD) in comparison…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Attention Deficit Disorders, Behavior Disorders, Block Scheduling
Fager, Jennifer – 1997
This booklet is part of a series of reports on "hot topics" in education. It explores alternative school schedules as ways to make education be the best it can for all students. Block scheduling, 4-day school weeks, and year-round education are alternative scheduling methods that generate interest in schools in the northwestern United…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Alternate Day Schedules, Block Scheduling, Educational Change
North Carolina State Dept. of Public Instruction, Raleigh. Div. of Accountability Services/Research. – 1997
Block scheduling has grown rapidly in recent years. In North Carolina, 77 schools started block scheduling in 1995-96, bringing the total number of blocked schools in the state to 207. A previous evaluation compared 1995 End-of-Course (EOC) Test scores for block-scheduled (blocked) and nonblocked schools. This report presents results of the…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Algebra, Biology, Block Scheduling
Creamean, Sharon Lightle; Horvath, Robert Jeffery – 2000
This report describes a program for the exploration of block scheduling. The targeted population consists of high school students in a growing, middle-class community, located in a suburban setting of a large mid-western city. The historical background of block scheduling is documented through data gathered using attendance reports, student…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Attendance, Block Scheduling, Educational Environment
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