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Bruckner, M. Martha – Educational Forum, 1996
Ralston (Nebraska) High School's restructuring was helped by participation in the Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development's consortium. Ralston faculty led the change process, holding students to higher standards, altering curriculum beyond arbitrary subject limitations, changing the school year, and increasing staff expertise with…
Descriptors: Consortia, Curriculum Development, Educational Change, High Schools
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Pill, Geoffrey – Journal of General Education, 1972
American high schools are more rigidly scheduled" than their British counterparts, which use the form" system. Author, an English schoolmaster, describes the two systems in detail. (SP)
Descriptors: Comparative Education, Grouping (Instructional Purposes), High Schools, Individualized Instruction
Ohde, Roger R. – 1977
This dissertation examines various characteristics of 79 Iowa public high schools reporting success or failure in the use of flexible modular scheduling (FMS), based on questionnaire responses. FMS schools were defined as having a daily schedule of more than 14 modules and using either variable class times, large group, small group, or independent…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Discipline Problems, Educational Facilities Design, Flexible Scheduling
Carroll, Joseph M. – 1987
The Copernican Plan is a way to organize high schools on the basis of research and experience concerning more effective and efficient instruction. Research indicates that large-block scheduling has proven to be very successful. In the plan, each student will enroll in one class at a time for about 4 hours each day for a period of 30 days. An…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Change Strategies, Class Organization, Educational Change