| I just spent 20 minutes on a middle school website and could not figure out how many classes a day they have. Can you all help? |
| Seven or eight, depending on the school |
Do you mean how many periods or how many academic subjects? The former is usually 8 but can vary if the school uses block scheduling (and 8 includes PE and lunch). If you mean the latter, Everyone has English, World Studies, Math and Science, but the rest depend on whether the student is in a magnet program, language immersion or program where foreign language is required (vs. being an elective), etc. You might have a better answer if you identified the school. |
|
Also, some schools do block schedules, so that also changes the number of periods a day. Which school?
|
| How would we know if we do not know the school? Even then, just call the school and ask. |
It should be linked under "Bell Schedule." |
^^^ This |
7 or 8 + an advisory period, other posters can tell you what waste of time this 20-30minutes, or search this forum - teachers and students do not enjoy the advisory "lessons" |
| It depends if they follow an all period schedule or an odd/even schedule. It you post the school, someone can probably direct you to where it is on the school website. |
|
Ours is seven subjects every day. Three days a week, there is also an advisory period to provide time for kids to catch up on any missed work or get extra help.
Your middle school likely has a bell schedule somewhere on its website. |
|
Im the OP. Thank you to posters who said to look under bell schedule. That was the info I was looking for.
Can anyone tell me why some middle schools use a block schedule and others do not? |
Like so much in MCPS, it is simply not standardized and left to principal discretion. |
This. And we’ve experienced it three different ways at this point. |
It was a fad twenty years ago. |
Some schools get additional funding to staff eight academic/elective classes. Without that, they have to have seven classes or class size drastically increases. |