Anonymous wrote:The longer school day started with the 2022-2023 school year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wouldn’t going back to all classes every day mean a longer school day? You have to make up the instruction minutes for all the time you spend changing classes.
Not necessarily. In APS the high school day ended at 2:10 through the early 2000s and the lunch periods were longer then too.
Did they have so many days off school? Doubt it. APS also didn’t use to do 2 full weeks of winter break.
Winter break started on christmas eve and ended new year's day. There were far fewer days off and practically no teacher work days. Summer was also longer by about one or two weeks.
The state-mandated hours for time in school has not changed.
Anonymous wrote:The problem isn't with block scheduling. The problem is APS sprung it upon teachers without giving them professional development on how to instruct in the block. They had no buy in and no training on how to plan effectively. -APS admin
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wouldn’t going back to all classes every day mean a longer school day? You have to make up the instruction minutes for all the time you spend changing classes.
Not necessarily. In APS the high school day ended at 2:10 through the early 2000s and the lunch periods were longer then too.
Did they have so many days off school? Doubt it. APS also didn’t use to do 2 full weeks of winter break.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wouldn’t going back to all classes every day mean a longer school day? You have to make up the instruction minutes for all the time you spend changing classes.
Not necessarily. In APS the high school day ended at 2:10 through the early 2000s and the lunch periods were longer then too.
Anonymous wrote:Wouldn’t going back to all classes every day mean a longer school day? You have to make up the instruction minutes for all the time you spend changing classes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My junior regularly takes tests that are longer than 45 minutes. The one year he had math in the daily 45 minute block, the tests were spread over 2 days. Which fine, but really opens up even further opportunities for cheating which is already a problem.
For the AP classes that involve writing, it's impossible to do writing tasks as given on the AP test in 45 min. Meaning if your exam is a DBQ or LEQ, when are you ever practicing these or being tested on this? I wonder how HB handles this.
Well how did the high schools handle this before block scheduling? It hasn't always been this way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this review is driven by the - everything is better at HB - crowd. They have 45 minute blocks daily. Nevermind plenty of us don't think everything is better at HB.
The reason HB has this schedule (8 45 minute blocks) is they have to in order for high school kids to be able to participate in sports at their home high school. It's not some educational choice. They have to build a block into the end of the school day for transportation, basically.
Not true.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It will result in more time wasted. We all know it takes a good chunk of the beginning of each period to get everyone settled and on task. At least with block scheduling, there’s still a large amount of time left to accomplish something.
No it won't. 90 minutes of math is just waaay too long to keep kids engaged. So much time wasted. I hate block scheduling, didn't like it back when they picked it up and went with it as the latest fad. I'm not surprised it didn't deliver. Go back to the regular class schedule now that the data isn't there to keep it.
TJ had block scheduling in the late 90s and I’m guessing it still does.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It will result in more time wasted. We all know it takes a good chunk of the beginning of each period to get everyone settled and on task. At least with block scheduling, there’s still a large amount of time left to accomplish something.
No it won't. 90 minutes of math is just waaay too long to keep kids engaged. So much time wasted. I hate block scheduling, didn't like it back when they picked it up and went with it as the latest fad. I'm not surprised it didn't deliver. Go back to the regular class schedule now that the data isn't there to keep it.