Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With generational rise in ADHD, fatigued teachers unlikely to develop the project based, hands on work that best suits it — why are more high schools going to block schedule.
My impression at our local Arlington high school is the teachers teacher for 40 min, then have the kids do classwork/homework quietly for the next 40 minutes. I feel like they are squandering instruction time; they can leave homework for home.
Block scheduling as a trend long predates the focus on equity. Schools don’t use it for “equity.”
Do other schools make better use of block scheduling?! Why are so many schools following it, including many privates.
That's not equitable and that's how school districts make their decisions these days.
Anonymous wrote:My ADHD kids did better with block schedule because the teacher had more time to do hands-on projects and they only had to do homework for half of their classes each night. Teachers should not be lecturing for that long.
It’s also more similar to the way the college is set up.
Anonymous wrote:My ADHD kids did better with block schedule because the teacher had more time to do hands-on projects and they only had to do homework for half of their classes each night. Teachers should not be lecturing for that long.
It’s also more similar to the way the college is set up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With generational rise in ADHD, fatigued teachers unlikely to develop the project based, hands on work that best suits it — why are more high schools going to block schedule.
My impression at our local Arlington high school is the teachers teacher for 40 min, then have the kids do classwork/homework quietly for the next 40 minutes. I feel like they are squandering instruction time; they can leave homework for home.
Do other schools make better use of block scheduling?! Why are so many schools following it, including many privates.
That's not equitable and that's how school districts make their decisions these days.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With generational rise in ADHD, fatigued teachers unlikely to develop the project based, hands on work that best suits it — why are more high schools going to block schedule.
My impression at our local Arlington high school is the teachers teacher for 40 min, then have the kids do classwork/homework quietly for the next 40 minutes. I feel like they are squandering instruction time; they can leave homework for home.
Do other schools make better use of block scheduling?! Why are so many schools following it, including many privates.
That's not equitable and that's how school districts make their decisions these days.
Anonymous wrote:With generational rise in ADHD, fatigued teachers unlikely to develop the project based, hands on work that best suits it — why are more high schools going to block schedule.
My impression at our local Arlington high school is the teachers teacher for 40 min, then have the kids do classwork/homework quietly for the next 40 minutes. I feel like they are squandering instruction time; they can leave homework for home.
Do other schools make better use of block scheduling?! Why are so many schools following it, including many privates.