The Effects of Block Scheduling on Academic Success

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The Effects of Block Scheduling on Academic Success

The current research exploring the effect of class scheduling format changes (shifting from three fifty-minute class sessions a week to two eighty-minute class meetings per week) on undergraduate student learning is quite limited. Extending beyond the undergraduate literature, this report also examines research on the assessment of scheduling formats for time intensive courses (nontraditional, part-time, and continuing education), graduate courses, and block scheduling at the high school level. Researchers investigated students' academic achievement, attitudes, student/teacher interactions, school/classroom environment, instructional methodologies, and challenges of an extended instructional period. Although the ages of these groups of students are outside


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The Effects of Block Scheduling on Academic Success by Jeff Palmer - Issuu