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Rikard, G. Linda; Banville, Dominique – High School Journal, 2005
In recent years, the blocked class schedule has replaced the shorter traditional schedule in high schools throughout the United States. In order to study this change, these researchers examined physical education teacher perceptions of their experience teaching on a block schedule compared to the traditional schedule. The views of fifteen physical…
Descriptors: High Schools, Teaching Methods, Student Behavior, Physical Education
Veal, William R. – 1999
As forms of school restructuring sweep the nation, teachers are interested in how block scheduling will influence their models of professional development. This report examines the effects of a high school's transition from a traditional to a hybrid schedule--three traditional and two block classes each day--on science teaching and learning.…
Descriptors: Block Scheduling, Classroom Techniques, High Schools, Instructional Effectiveness
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Edwards, M. Craig; Briers, Gary E. – Journal of Career and Technical Education, 2002
Agricutlure teachers using modified A/B (n=12) or 9-week 4x4 (n=10) block schedules were surveyed. The value of relevant inservice education was positively related to satisfaction with effective teaching practices and student achievement. Teacher satisfaction with opportunities to use effective practices was associated with achievement, especially…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Agricultural Education, Block Scheduling, Inservice Teacher Education
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Schultz, Robert Arthur – Gifted Child Today, 2000
This article discusses the purpose of block scheduling, types of block scheduling (alternate day, accelerated block scheduling, and the Copernican Plan), and how many facets of block scheduling can enhance gifted and talented learner experiences. The need for teacher training to meet the needs of gifted learners is emphasized. (Contains…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Acceleration (Education), Block Scheduling, Elementary Secondary Education
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Zepeda, Sally J.; Mayers, R. Stewart – Review of Educational Research, 2006
In this analysis of 58 empirical studies of high school block scheduling, the authors report findings in and across five groupings. Within groups, data were inconsistent regarding whether teachers' practices changed, but teachers believed that staff development was necessary to teach in a block schedule. Block scheduling appeared to increase…
Descriptors: High Schools, Standardized Tests, Grade Point Average, Block Scheduling
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Hackmann, Donald G. – Middle School Journal, 2002
Explains why block scheduling has become accepted practice at the secondary level and describes potential benefits for middle level schools. Shares common scheduling approaches and discusses their appropriateness for use at the middle level. Presents alternative models that would permit middle school faculties to capitalize on the benefits of…
Descriptors: Block Scheduling, Class Organization, Flexible Scheduling, Middle Schools
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Zepeda, Sally J. – International Journal of Educational Management, 2006
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to record and summarize the tensions and problems experienced by a high school administrative team as they attempted to change supervision alongside instruction in a transition to a new block schedule. Design/methodology/approach: A case study method was used. As a case study, the research is contextual in…
Descriptors: High Schools, Block Scheduling, Elementary Secondary Education, Supervision
Robbins, Pam; Gregory, Gayle; Herndon, Lynne E. – 2000
This book provides an array of strategies that can help teachers, administrators, and staff-development personnel as they plan, develop, and deliver content within extended periods of instructional time. It emphasizes the importance of teachers and administrators working together to improve instruction and contends that staff development remains…
Descriptors: Block Scheduling, Classroom Techniques, Educational Environment, Educational Practices
Opalinski, Gail; Ellers, Sherry; Goodman, Amy – Principal Leadership, 2004
This article describes the revised summer school program developed by the Anchorage (AK) School District for students who received poor grades in their core classes or low scores in the Alaska Benchmark Examinations or California Achievement Tests. More than 500 middle school students from the district spent five weeks during the summer honing…
Descriptors: Summer Schools, Educational Change, Curriculum, Middle Schools
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Zepeda, Sally J.; Mayers, R. Stewart – High School Journal, 2001
Across the United States, an ever-increasing number of high schools have reevaluated their use of instructional time and have adopted some form of a block schedule. Block scheduling, an innovation grounded in Trump's Flexible Modular Scheduling Design, reorganizes the school day into extended blocks of time, each approximately 70 to 90 minutes.…
Descriptors: Flexible Scheduling, Block Scheduling, Discipline Problems, Mentors
Jordan, Miriam M.; Padilla, Michael – 1999
This research explores the structure of possible science education reform that can be compatible with structural change in high schools. Financial pressures, increased or decreased enrollment, state mandated changes, block scheduling, and assignments of students to age-appropriate grades are all examples of structural changes. Block scheduling is…
Descriptors: Block Scheduling, Concept Formation, Curriculum Development, Educational Change
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Rice, Jennifer King; Croninger, Robert G.; Roellke, Christopher F. – Economics of Education Review, 2002
Draws on data from 1988 National Education Longitudinal Study to estimate the impact of block-scheduled mathematics course on 10th-grade student achievement and teachers' use of class time. Findings suggest that while block scheduling is positively associated with teachers' use of multiple instructional methods and more individualized instruction,…
Descriptors: Block Scheduling, Grade 10, High School Students, Individualized Instruction
Butterfield, Eric – School Construction News, 1999
Discusses the teaching methods shaping the classroom of tomorrow, where sixth graders carry laptops and teachers work in teams. Space requirements for departmentalized vs. interdisciplinary education are examined as are the types of materials and furniture used in design classrooms for block scheduling, and differing instruction methods changing…
Descriptors: Block Scheduling, Classroom Design, Classroom Furniture, Computer Uses in Education
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Kiger, Derick M. – Planning and Changing, 2003
Parents comprise a key stakeholder group of public education that can exert significant influence over school policy, budget, and instructional decisions. Restricting this group's participation in school reform jeopardizes the success of any innovation, no matter how promising. This may be occurring with block scheduling. This research describes…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Block Scheduling, Professional Development, School Restructuring
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Stader, David L. – Rural Educator, 2001
A study comparing block scheduling in small high schools to a traditional schedule surveyed 62 administrators and 152 teachers of small Missouri high schools. Findings indicate that administrators and teachers are supportive of block scheduling and that block scheduling stimulates changes in teacher methodology, improves school climate, and…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Administrator Attitudes, Block Scheduling, Educational Environment
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