Block Scheduling in HS

My dd just started middle school this year and they have the block schedule. In one way I really friggin hate it! Where we live kids go from 7:45 until 2:45 M-Th but on Friday they go 7:45 until 12:45 so every other week or so *usually* she ends up on the early block which means she eats LUNCH at 10:10. By the time she gets to lunch she isn't hungry enough which makes her nuts by the time she gets home. I absolutely hate that part of it.

The part I do love is that she struggles in math but instead of burning her out every night with hammering math we do 1/2 and 1/2. So if she has Math on Monday then she won't have it again until Wednesday which gives us Monday night and Tuesday night to work on it and not force her to sit there at the table bawling because she's so tired of it that night. Stuff like that I really like it for but the early days I really hate it for.
 
The first kind is an "A/B" schedule. That is where you have 4 (usually) classes one day, then you have 4 more the next day.

The second is a semester type. You have 4 classes for 2 hours every day for one semester, and then the next semester you have the same 4 classes every day.

Our town's high schools have the second kind described above. So for example, in the fall semester a student does a year's worth of Geometry, Chemistry, American History, and Spanish. In the spring semester they do a year's worth of foreign language, phys ed, home economics, and English.
I also don't understand how the whole thing works with AP classes-if you finish the class in December but the test isn't till May, how well is the material retained?

Also, in our town anyway, the teachers' union was the group that really pushed for this...the teachers really seem to like it.
 
A couple of things I didn't like about it when my DS was in HS ..

A lot of his teachers didn't seem to make good use of the time. He said there was a lot of slack time and they always did their homework in class. This did not help him to learn good time management/study skills in my opinion. Maybe I don't understand the concept well but it seems to me that if you are cramming what was previously taught over a year into a semester that the teachers should be lecturing the majority of the class time. Someone correct me if I'm wrong.

Now granted, the HS he attended had a lot of issues and academically was not nearly as challenging as I would have liked. He had a big problem adjusting to college because he was not prepared academically and did not know how to study very well. He graduated with honors from HS and took college prep classes so he had a false sense of what was required in college (and of course would not listen to me.....:confused3 )
 
My high school had it. I hated it, the classes were an hour and a half, and I could not stand it. I was always very figetty (and since I went to a performing arts high school and my major was dance, I was able to use up alot of energy in the morning, but it still didnt help). In college I only have one lecture that lasts that long, and even though its a class I love, I still have a hard time sitting that long. My high school was very good (and strict)academically, and ranks highly (PSSA score, SATs scores, etc.), so I guess they know what they were doing.

The reason we needed it was so that students could still have every class they needed (there was only college prep, honors and AP tracks at my school) to get into college, as well as have their art major (which took up half the day classes.



Hey, did you happen to go to CAPA? If so, I wasn't aware that all of their courses were either prep, honors or AP? I'll have to give another look at it for DD.
 

You had red days and white days. On red days you attended classes 1. 3. 5 and on white days you would attend classes 2, 4, 6. Instead of going to 6 classes everyday, and only going for 50 minutes, you would attend 3 classes a day for 90 minutes each on each assigned day.


I have the same except we have 4 classes a day. I really like it because you learn better. Ours are called A and B days... But it works because we don't have to go to that one dreaded class eacch day. But then when we had a day earlier in the year when we went to all 8 people loved it.. but I really like it how we havee it.. Going from a rotating schedual to this was tough at first but then it got easier as it went and I learn better this way to..

Also remember in college classes might be simular to a block schedual.
 
Our town's high schools have the second kind described above. So for example, in the fall semester a student does a year's worth of Geometry, Chemistry, American History, and Spanish. In the spring semester they do a year's worth of foreign language, phys ed, home economics, and English.
I also don't understand how the whole thing works with AP classes-if you finish the class in December but the test isn't till May, how well is the material retained?.


This is what concerns me also. I would imagine this is where a tutor would come in the picture.

Now reading the rest of the threads, I'm seeing that some like block scheduling and some don't. Everyone has such good points. But, being we don't have a choice, I'm going to go into with open eyes and give it a chance.
 
My nephew didn't like it. Because there were fewer class times per day there were fewer periods to take a class. For instance, if he wanted to take calcII he had to drop band. They were both offered at the same time and only at that time.
 
We had block scheduling when I was in high school, it had just started up then, and I think that they are still on that schedule 11 years later so it must be working out well. We had 4 classes per day that were 90 mins long. We had two semesters, and classes would last a semester instead of a school year. So instead of having 6 classes a year we had 8, so by my junior and senior years I could get early dismissal or I also would have had the option to take more electives or whatever I wanted to.
 
Can someone explain the good, the bad and the ugly of this type of scheduling. The HS that I'm interested in sending my dd to has it. For the life of me, I can't figure out the good part of it. While I can't voice my opinion on it, because I'm not too familiar with it, I, can't see how this is a good policy.

If a student has math in the beginning of the term and doesn't get it again until either the end of the year or worse, the beginning of the following term, how well can the student do, without getting a tutor to refresh their memory so they're not forgetting what they already learned.

I tried doing a search, but, I still don't understand it.

First let me say, I LOVE BLOCK SCHEDULING!

There are two different types of block schedules that I'm aware of. First, there is one schedule where each class meets every other day. On the other hand, I've heard about some block schedules where you go to the same class everyday, but the courses rotate so Math I is offered every other semester (or something similar to that).

My freshman and sophmore year my high school had the typical 8 class schedule. We attended each class everyday with 45 minute class periods.

My junior year our high school switched to block scheduling. We used our school colors to "label" which classes we would attend.

Thus, here's how a class schedule would look:
Purple
Period 1
Period 2
Period 3
Period 4

Gold
Period 5
Period 6
Period 7
Period 8

White
Periods 1-8 (only used on days before winter break/spring break/early release, etc.)

At our school, each period lasted 90 minutes long with a 10 minute passing period. My high school is not that large, but they felt the extra long passing period would help us. It sure did! We had a break for a bit to chat with friends before we went in for another 90 minute period.

I took a lot of science classes and loved the extended time for those subject areas. I also took foreign language both junior and senior years and it wasn't as difficult to adjust to the every other day schedule as I thought.

Overall, this schedule was perfect for college-bound students, such as myself. It's basically the same idea that you have long classes and need to be responsible for your work, as it may not be due the next day.

My advice is to first find out what type of block scheduling they use and, then, make your decision. Your DD's new high school may be like mine where you do take Biology all year long not every other semester.

Speaking as a person who went to the same high school and personally experienced the change, the block scheduling we had was much better than the typical 8 period schedule. I hope this helps! :)
 
Hate it. My son is in Band, which is a required block class for BOTH SEMESTERS. I have argued the point til I'm blue in the face. Some how he can get a whole years worth of Biology or Algebra in one semester "block" but hes has to take band both? He cant fit in advanced language courses or electives that he wants because of this. The way I figure it, he will have 8 years of band when he graduates!
 
Looking at all these schedules, I would say that my High school actually did something pretty good. We had the A/B Day block schedule described above. You took 6 classes each semester, for a total of 12 classes each year. We had 90 minute classes, with a ‘tutorial’ and break between the morning classes. Tutorial was where you could go to your teachers and ask for help, although truth-be-told most kids just visited with their friends and got mid-morning snacks from the snack bar. Then there was lunch between the 2nd and 3rd class of the day. We were never in class longer then 90 minutes without a rather long (about 40 minutes break).

The schedule looked something like this:

1/4 – 8:30 – 10:10
Tutorial – 10:10 – 10:40
Break – 10:40 – 10:50
2/5 – 10:50 – 12:25
Lunch – 12:25 – 1:05
3/6 – 1:05 – 3:15

Although 90 minute classes felt long, with the nice long breaks between them, it really wasn’t bad. I would advocate for an A/B type of block schedule, but really don’t understand this semester block schedule. That just seems weird to me.
 
My high school did this starting my junior year... on monday we would go to period 1 for like an hour and a half then we would go to "tutorial" which alternated which class it was everyday, like if you had 1st period tutorial on monday tuesday would be second thursday would be third and so on, then we would go to period 3, then lunch then period 5 and thats that.. the classes were longer but it made it easier to learn because the teacher generally had time to do the lesson, so if monday was like that then tuesday would be period 2, tutorial (and in tutorial basically whatever period it is that day you go to that class and you have that like 45 minutes I think it was to get help for that class or do home work for another class or study, but you could use that time to ask that teacher questions... and you could get a "tutorial pass" to go to a different class if say for example you have 1st period tutorial on monday but you had a test in second period on tuseday, you could get a pass and go to that class to get help if needed for that test because you wouldnt have that class again before because that class wasnt until the next day. it made it nice because then on lunch or whatever you can do your thing and not have to worry about it) then you go to 4th period, then lunch, then 6th period. so monday and thursday were 1,3,5 days and tuesday and friday were 2,4,6 days and wednesday you would go to all 6 classes... but some wednesdays our school would start at 9:15 because they gave the teachers time to do meetings... every other wednesday we got to sleep in. I really liked it! my senior year (now I wasnt in honors classes.. I took recomended and thats it!) I had like 3 electives... I was also in band my junior year and it all worked out fine... like I said senior year I was in ceramics, i was a teachers assistant (and I would always cheat the system and go to her class for tutorial when tutorial was with a teacher I didnt like :rolleyes1 ) and I was in work experience... I also had to take PE my senior year... because we only needed 2 years, your freshman year then you could blow it off for band or ROTC or another elective and do it at the college but I was too lazy... so I ended up taking it in my senior year!! OK I think I am going to end this novel because it probably makes NO sense... hope it helps!
 
I've taught traditional scheduling, and I've taught block scheduling. While each has it benefits, there's absolutely no doubt in my mind that traditional scheduling is better for the majority of the students.

Good points about block scheduling:

Students focus on only four classes per semester; that means only four teachers, only four books, only four possible papers or four upcoming tests at any given time, etc.

Since students are in each class for 90 minutes/day, there are fewer class changes during the school day. Class changes are wasted time, and they are typically the time when students tend to get into fights or other mischief -- fewer class changes means fewer opportunities for these things.

Block scheduling means fewer students per class. Look at it this way: let's say you have 1000 students in a high school, and you have 7 English teachers -- let's make it simple and pretend that all the numbers work out evenly. In a traditional 6-period day, each teacher teaches five classes and has one planning period; thus, each teaches 142 students or 28 students per class. In block scheduling, those teachers will teach six classes per year (three classes per day X two semesters plus a planning period each semester); thus, each class will have 23 students per class. Of course, that's in theory.

Block scheduling means that teachers have fewer students at any given time upon which they need to focus. Back when we taught traditional schedules, I usually had close to 150 students between my five classes. Right now I have more like 75 between three classes. This means that when I collect papers, I have fewer to grade at any one time -- I can return them more quickly, which is better for the students.

Block scheduling saves money on books. If the school has 1000 students, and they all need an English book for the entire school year, the school must buy 1000 books. On the other hand, if 50% of the students take English in the fall and 50% of the students take English in the spring . . . the school can buy 550 books and be perfectly safe. Our high school textbooks are running $60-80 each these days -- cheaper alternatives just don't exist -- and schools aren't made of money.

Block scheduling means the student has the opportunity to take more classes during his high school career. In a traditional schedule, the student can take 6 classes X 4 years, or 24 classes. In a block scheduling school, the student can potentially take 8 classes X 4 years, or 32 classes. If you map out what a college-bound student would need to take, you'll see that all those extra sciences and the two foreign languages kind of prevent the student from taking "fun classes" like Modern Fitness or Art. On the other hand, with block scheduling, the student can squeeze in both Chemistry AND band or ROTC -- he doens't have to choose.

Block scheduling means that a senior who's performed well during his first three years can potentially finish his or her coursework mid-year and "graduate" in December. This would allow the student to begin college classes or go to work full-time in January.

Block scheduling also means that a student who has messed up and failed some important classes could possibly come back for JUST fall semester to repeat those 1-2 classes that prevented him from graduating. Some failing students would be willing to return August -December . . . but if it meant a whole year, they'd just drop out.

Block scheduling is most beneficial for lab classes, home ec classes, PE classes -- you know, classes in which "setting up" for the day's activities requires some time.

Block scheduling means that the class is completed in 90 days instead of 180. For a student approaching a much-hated class, this can be the silver lining to a bad situation.

A student who is seriously sick -- or who has a baby, perhaps -- can take a semester off, then return the following semester . . . and he or she can still graduate on time.



Now for the negatives -- and in my mind they are significant, especially for the low-level student:

Do the math: With a traditional schedule, the student receives 180 days x 55 minutes of instruction (9900 minutes). With block scheduling, the student receives 90 days x 90 minutes (8100 minutes). The student loses 900 minutes of instruction -- that's more than 16 traditional class periods! How is this legal? The school (well, actually, I think it's the county or the school system) must write a request asking permission to give credit with fewer hours.

Since we began block scheduling, I've been forced to give more homework to make up for the missing class time (despite the fact that a certain percentage of my students just won't do it no matter what), and I still cover MUCH LESS material than I did in the past. We have so much emphasis on making sure the kids pass the state tests these days; those things are taught, and many of the other little things that made the school day enjoyable are passed over because there's simply not enough time.

We move so much more quickly on block scheduling that a student who's out can quickly fall so far behind that he never really catches up. In the past, we might've read two chapters of a novel each evening; with block scheduling we have to read four chapters -- for a poor reader or a kid with a reading disability, that's a daunting task, and many just won't even try. Missing a day in block scheduling is bad; missing several days ALWAYS results in some loss of learning and ultimately grades.

While block scheduling allows a good, motivated student the opportunity to sample lots of elective classes, it gives a poor student a good excuse to quit trying. I've had more than one student say something along these lines: "Well, I had a bad grade on my research paper, and it's just too much work to try to bring my average up to passing now -- I'll just quit coming this semster. I can come back in the spring and start this class again." We've always had kids with this apathetic attitude, but it has increased exponentially with block scheduling. The potential "second chance" gives kids an excuse not to buckle down and do their best.

A student who is absent a week or so may come back to find himself so hopelessly behind that he just can't do it -- remember, we have a certain number of kids who aren't trying to get into college or graduate in the top 25 -- they just hope that they can do their best and manage to graduate with Cs and Ds. Last semester I had a good kid who was very, very sick with the flu -- real flu, she was hospitalized, and she was too sick to keep up with her work during her illness -- and she ended up dropping out for the semester. She missed so much that she just couldn't manage the make-up work, so she went to the community college and picked up a GED instead. Under traditional scheduling, she might've had a fighting chance.

As I said above, in theory, block scheduling classes should be smaller. In reality, we're seeing MANY more repeaters -- students who have failed the class and are forced to take it a second time. Right now I have two senior English classes; in those two classes I have SEVEN students who failed the class in the fall semester and have been "recycled" back into my class a second time. This is a lose-lose situation for both the student and the teacher. At least under traditional scheduling, the student had the summer to "get over" having failed the class -- now he's thrown right back into it immediately, often with the same teacher.

Because of the kids' attention spans, the teacher is forced to change activities frequently (the mind can only absorb what the butt can withstand). So we might start with a discussion of last nights' reading, then switch to a 10-minute groupwork activity, then come back together to check the work, then move on to grammar, and finally end with a short quiz. We are forced to work "movement" into the day's lessons because it "perks up" the kids and keeps them going; for example, I have them move in and out of groups for quick activities, and I store their grammar books on a shelf in the back of the room so that they have to get up and go get them -- the movement does perk them up, but it also means I have to get them settled back down into their desks and quiet again before we can begin our next activity (wasted time).

Classes like English and history are the worst for block scheduling; unlike lab classes, set-up time isn't a factor for us. However, we are forced to assign larger blocks of reading each evening, and for some students that isn't a realistic thing. We teachers are split on whether we should use class time to do some of the reading: We're already teaching on an abbreviated schedule, so it doesn't seem right to use our limited time, yet we know a certain number of our students aren't capable of reading 3, 4, 5 chapters per night independently.

You already brought up one big issue: The student who takes math or foreign language in the fall of his sophomore year could potentially not encounter the next level class until spring of his junior year. In theory, the student should've committed the material to memory so that the lapse of time is irrelevant; in reality . . . well, that isn't always true -- especially for weaker students in thier weaker subjects.

With class time at a premium, our schools have dropped many fun things that used to boost school spirit and make kids enjoy their high school experience. Having already lost 16 class days though, we no longer have pep rallies, assemblies, senior picnics, and yearbook signing periods -- we can't afford to do it. As a result, many students see school simply as drudgery. Morale and school spirit are down.

Students who take AP tests have a surprising issue with block scheduling. These are national tests, and they are ONLY given on specific days in early May. So the AP student has two options: 1) Take the class in the fall semester, then wait 4-5 months to take the expensive test which determines whether he receives college credit, or 2) Take the class in the spring semester and take the test before he's finished the class. Obviously, the student in a traditional schedule has a big leg-up on the AP tests.

The same thing is true for the SAT. Let's say two juniors sit for the SAT in January or February. Luck of the draw gave one of these students math and English in the fall semester -- he's just finished an intensive vocabulary study, and he's finished Trig. He's going to outperform his counterpart whose elective classes fell in the fall semester. Of course, that second junior can plan to take the SAT again, or he can plan to take it later in the year.


While block scheduling has some benefits (most of them theoretical), I know that I taught more material, and I knew my students better back when we had a traditional schedule. My students now seem to pass through so quickly that frequently I'll run into them at the grocery store a year after graduation, and I won't remember their names; I have a better recollection of those students from a decade ago prior to block scheduling -- I had more time with them.
 
Hate it. My son is in Band, which is a required block class for BOTH SEMESTERS. I have argued the point til I'm blue in the face. Some how he can get a whole years worth of Biology or Algebra in one semester "block" but hes has to take band both? He cant fit in advanced language courses or electives that he wants because of this. The way I figure it, he will have 8 years of band when he graduates!
That's because (if your credit requirements are like ours) band in the fall semester equals a 1/2 PE credit and band in the spring semester equals a 1/2 fine arts credit. Here all students have to have 1 1/2 credits of PE and 1 credit of fine arts to graduate.

I loved block scheduling as I stated in my earlier post. Ours was the type that was scheduled as A/B days. You took, say, math every other day all year long. Some weeks you had math three days and others two, depending on how it fell. Sure the classes were a little on the long side if you didn't enjoy them, but there was plenty of time to work on things in class that you didn't understand. And time to get some homework done instead of having to do it all at home. Plus, with classes every other day, you had more time to study for tests and to finish that homework you didn't get done during class time. My son loved it too.
 
I've taught traditional scheduling, and I've taught block scheduling. While each has it benefits, there's absolutely no doubt in my mind that traditional scheduling is better for the majority of the students.

Good points about block scheduling:

Students focus on only four classes per semester; that means only four teachers, only four books, only four possible papers or four upcoming tests at any given time, etc.

Since students are in each class for 90 minutes/day, there are fewer class changes during the school day. Class changes are wasted time, and they are typically the time when students tend to get into fights or other mischief -- fewer class changes means fewer opportunities for these things.

Block scheduling means fewer students per class. Look at it this way: let's say you have 1000 students in a high school, and you have 7 English teachers -- let's make it simple and pretend that all the numbers work out evenly. In a traditional 6-period day, each teacher teaches five classes and has one planning period; thus, each teaches 142 students or 28 students per class. In block scheduling, those teachers will teach six classes per year (three classes per day X two semesters plus a planning period each semester); thus, each class will have 23 students per class. Of course, that's in theory.

Block scheduling means that teachers have fewer students at any given time upon which they need to focus. Back when we taught traditional schedules, I usually had close to 150 students between my five classes. Right now I have more like 75 between three classes. This means that when I collect papers, I have fewer to grade at any one time -- I can return them more quickly, which is better for the students.

Block scheduling saves money on books. If the school has 1000 students, and they all need an English book for the entire school year, the school must buy 1000 books. On the other hand, if 50% of the students take English in the fall and 50% of the students take English in the spring . . . the school can buy 550 books and be perfectly safe. Our high school textbooks are running $60-80 each these days -- cheaper alternatives just don't exist -- and schools aren't made of money.

Block scheduling means the student has the opportunity to take more classes during his high school career. In a traditional schedule, the student can take 6 classes X 4 years, or 24 classes. In a block scheduling school, the student can potentially take 8 classes X 4 years, or 32 classes. If you map out what a college-bound student would need to take, you'll see that all those extra sciences and the two foreign languages kind of prevent the student from taking "fun classes" like Modern Fitness or Art. On the other hand, with block scheduling, the student can squeeze in both Chemistry AND band or ROTC -- he doens't have to choose.

Block scheduling means that a senior who's performed well during his first three years can potentially finish his or her coursework mid-year and "graduate" in December. This would allow the student to begin college classes or go to work full-time in January.

Block scheduling also means that a student who has messed up and failed some important classes could possibly come back for JUST fall semester to repeat those 1-2 classes that prevented him from graduating. Some failing students would be willing to return August -December . . . but if it meant a whole year, they'd just drop out.

Block scheduling is most beneficial for lab classes, home ec classes, PE classes -- you know, classes in which "setting up" for the day's activities requires some time.

Block scheduling means that the class is completed in 90 days instead of 180. For a student approaching a much-hated class, this can be the silver lining to a bad situation.

A student who is seriously sick -- or who has a baby, perhaps -- can take a semester off, then return the following semester . . . and he or she can still graduate on time.



Now for the negatives -- and in my mind they are significant, especially for the low-level student:

Do the math: With a traditional schedule, the student receives 180 days x 55 minutes of instruction (9900 minutes). With block scheduling, the student receives 90 days x 90 minutes (8100 minutes). The student loses 900 minutes of instruction -- that's more than 16 traditional class periods! How is this legal? The school (well, actually, I think it's the county or the school system) must write a request asking permission to give credit with fewer hours.

Since we began block scheduling, I've been forced to give more homework to make up for the missing class time (despite the fact that a certain percentage of my students just won't do it no matter what), and I still cover MUCH LESS material than I did in the past. We have so much emphasis on making sure the kids pass the state tests these days; those things are taught, and many of the other little things that made the school day enjoyable are passed over because there's simply not enough time.

We move so much more quickly on block scheduling that a student who's out can quickly fall so far behind that he never really catches up. In the past, we might've read two chapters of a novel each evening; with block scheduling we have to read four chapters -- for a poor reader or a kid with a reading disability, that's a daunting task, and many just won't even try. Missing a day in block scheduling is bad; missing several days ALWAYS results in some loss of learning and ultimately grades.

While block scheduling allows a good, motivated student the opportunity to sample lots of elective classes, it gives a poor student a good excuse to quit trying. I've had more than one student say something along these lines: "Well, I had a bad grade on my research paper, and it's just too much work to try to bring my average up to passing now -- I'll just quit coming this semster. I can come back in the spring and start this class again." We've always had kids with this apathetic attitude, but it has increased exponentially with block scheduling. The potential "second chance" gives kids an excuse not to buckle down and do their best.

A student who is absent a week or so may come back to find himself so hopelessly behind that he just can't do it -- remember, we have a certain number of kids who aren't trying to get into college or graduate in the top 25 -- they just hope that they can do their best and manage to graduate with Cs and Ds. Last semester I had a good kid who was very, very sick with the flu -- real flu, she was hospitalized, and she was too sick to keep up with her work during her illness -- and she ended up dropping out for the semester. She missed so much that she just couldn't manage the make-up work, so she went to the community college and picked up a GED instead. Under traditional scheduling, she might've had a fighting chance.

As I said above, in theory, block scheduling classes should be smaller. In reality, we're seeing MANY more repeaters -- students who have failed the class and are forced to take it a second time. Right now I have two senior English classes; in those two classes I have SEVEN students who failed the class in the fall semester and have been "recycled" back into my class a second time. This is a lose-lose situation for both the student and the teacher. At least under traditional scheduling, the student had the summer to "get over" having failed the class -- now he's thrown right back into it immediately, often with the same teacher.

Because of the kids' attention spans, the teacher is forced to change activities frequently (the mind can only absorb what the butt can withstand). So we might start with a discussion of last nights' reading, then switch to a 10-minute groupwork activity, then come back together to check the work, then move on to grammar, and finally end with a short quiz. We are forced to work "movement" into the day's lessons because it "perks up" the kids and keeps them going; for example, I have them move in and out of groups for quick activities, and I store their grammar books on a shelf in the back of the room so that they have to get up and go get them -- the movement does perk them up, but it also means I have to get them settled back down into their desks and quiet again before we can begin our next activity (wasted time).

Classes like English and history are the worst for block scheduling; unlike lab classes, set-up time isn't a factor for us. However, we are forced to assign larger blocks of reading each evening, and for some students that isn't a realistic thing. We teachers are split on whether we should use class time to do some of the reading: We're already teaching on an abbreviated schedule, so it doesn't seem right to use our limited time, yet we know a certain number of our students aren't capable of reading 3, 4, 5 chapters per night independently.

You already brought up one big issue: The student who takes math or foreign language in the fall of his sophomore year could potentially not encounter the next level class until spring of his junior year. In theory, the student should've committed the material to memory so that the lapse of time is irrelevant; in reality . . . well, that isn't always true -- especially for weaker students in thier weaker subjects.

With class time at a premium, our schools have dropped many fun things that used to boost school spirit and make kids enjoy their high school experience. Having already lost 16 class days though, we no longer have pep rallies, assemblies, senior picnics, and yearbook signing periods -- we can't afford to do it. As a result, many students see school simply as drudgery. Morale and school spirit are down.

Students who take AP tests have a surprising issue with block scheduling. These are national tests, and they are ONLY given on specific days in early May. So the AP student has two options: 1) Take the class in the fall semester, then wait 4-5 months to take the expensive test which determines whether he receives college credit, or 2) Take the class in the spring semester and take the test before he's finished the class. Obviously, the student in a traditional schedule has a big leg-up on the AP tests.

The same thing is true for the SAT. Let's say two juniors sit for the SAT in January or February. Luck of the draw gave one of these students math and English in the fall semester -- he's just finished an intensive vocabulary study, and he's finished Trig. He's going to outperform his counterpart whose elective classes fell in the fall semester. Of course, that second junior can plan to take the SAT again, or he can plan to take it later in the year.


While block scheduling has some benefits (most of them theoretical), I know that I taught more material, and I knew my students better back when we had a traditional schedule. My students now seem to pass through so quickly that frequently I'll run into them at the grocery store a year after graduation, and I won't remember their names; I have a better recollection of those students from a decade ago prior to block scheduling -- I had more time with them.

As a high school history teacher I agree 100%. Our school is currently discussing moving off of block scheduling and I am so glad.
 
Our MS and HS had block 8 scheduling. Four classes one day, and another four classes the other day. A and B days.

My kids love it.
They are both very active in sports, so, this allows them "two" nights to get their homework done.

However, if you miss a day...it sucks. Trying to make up is nearly impossible. Especially, because there is so much "lecture" time, and you have missed it all!

My kids must almost dead to miss school!
 
That's because (if your credit requirements are like ours) band in the fall semester equals a 1/2 PE credit and band in the spring semester equals a 1/2 fine arts credit. Here all students have to have 1 1/2 credits of PE and 1 credit of fine arts to graduate.

Nope, no 1/2 credit. These are full credit classes that last the full 90 min blocks just like any other courses.
 
Nope, no 1/2 credit. These are full credit classes that last the full 90 min blocks just like any other courses.
Hmmm, then I'm glad that ours was the other way. Much easier!
 
my son's hs just started this, this school year. I have to tell you...I have never seen so many kids on the honor roll before...Most of the hs kids were on the honor roll...it was just amazing! At first Tyler didn't like it at all, but he come around and now its like second nature, he really enjoys having it (plus not carting around 20 pounds of books in his backpack everyday is a joy!)
 


Disney Vacation Planning. Free. Done for You.
Our Authorized Disney Vacation Planners are here to provide personalized, expert advice, answer every question, and uncover the best discounts. Let Dreams Unlimited Travel take care of all the details, so you can sit back, relax, and enjoy a stress-free vacation.
Start Your Disney Vacation
Disney EarMarked Producer






DIS Facebook DIS youtube DIS Instagram DIS Pinterest DIS Tiktok DIS Twitter

Add as a preferred source on Google

Back
Top Bottom