Mackenzie Click-Mickelson
Chugging along the path of life
- Joined
- Oct 23, 2015
- Messages
- 29,672
Yeah and showing up late is usually frowned upon. Sometimes your professor should they choose to could prohibit you from entering if you were late.I don't know about it being less segmented because it still is. You have to show up at a certain time and you need to have your work done by a certain time.
It's changed a tiny bit since I was in the school but when I was there my high school had block scheduling--loved it. And we had a similar thing in middle school too.One of the HS in our district had block scheduling which is more like college. I really wished that my DD had that experience because it would have prepared her more for the rigors of college. In any case, I'm sure your son will do fine. My comment wasn't about academics, it was about the size of the school and how kids can often get lost at bigger schools.
In high school our block scheduling was 4 classes a day and study hall was built in to specific days. So MWF would be blocks ABCD and TuTh would be blocks WXYZ and then the next week MWF would be blocks WXYZ and TuTh would be blocks ABCD and so on and so on.
My husband's high school did block scheduling except for Friday which was back to normal scheduling. I preferred the way my school did it TBH though.
I found block scheduling helped to get used to longer classes and how college normally does does their scheduling of classes (some classes that I took though were shorter 5 day a week classes though just the majority weren't).
Size of school can def. make a difference. My alma mater hovers around 26,000-29,000 students per year. Lower level classes it's not uncommon to have 1,000 people in the lecture hall.
I can't say that college is more flexible. It depends on the program one is in, the college you go to, the professor you get, etc. My experience was the University was less willing to deal with excuses, etc. Basically you owned up to XYZ. Sure sometimes your professor would work with you and they certaintly wanted you to come to them should you need help but they also had rules. For instance it wasn't uncommon for me to have classes where the grade was solely based on X number of tests. There were a few where there might be 5 tests given and only 4 would count but if you missed a test whelp you just used up that throw away one. I had food poisoning where I ended up in the hospital and consequently missed a test. I'd like to think that in high school I could certaintly work with my teacher on making up the test or work. But in college in that class (as well as other classes where the grade was based on X number of tests) no excuse would allow me to make up the test.