Personlized Learning

As educators, we are always confronted with the cycle of change. This cycle has never been so challenging as it is in the 21Century. There is an acknowledgment by most educators that students learn differently but we tend to teach the way we learn. There is also an agreement that technology changes how we teach and how students learn but we continue to provide a learning space that suits the way educators learn. Leah Shaffer in the article below gives us an insight into "Why "Unlearning Old habits is an essential step for innovation. Enjoy your reading!

Homework

Below is an interesting read about the validity or lack thereof of the importance of homework. Cathy Vatterott poses questions and suggests ideas about homework. Do you find her argument interesting or does it challenge your views. I will be discussing homework in one of my podcasts with some teachers and administrators. Check us out!

Below is an excerpt from Cathy

Rethinking Homework: Best Practices That Support Diverse Needs, 2nd edition

by Cathy A. Vatterott, 2018

Table of Contents


Preface

Twenty years ago, when I was the totally frustrated parent of a 5th grader with learning disabilities, homework was a daily battle. I had an aching feeling that there was something wrong with homework, so I began looking at the research. My initial interest soon grew into an obsession and a passion to learn everything I could about this complicated issue. Who could have predicted where we are today—that some elementary schools would ban homework, that some schools would no longer count homework in the grade, and that some parents would begin to "just say no"? To quote the Grateful Dead, "What a long strange trip it's been." And what a gratifying one. I am proud to have been part of the movement.

Since the first edition of this book was published in 2009, much has changed, but the controversy surrounding homework has not abated. Research has still been unable to show proof of homework's benefit. Parents and teachers alike still confuse homework load with rigor and compliance with responsibility. More recently, media discussions have focused on elementary schools that are banning homework and parents who are becoming more vocal in their opinions.

Since 2009,

  • The economic divide in the United States has widened, leading to increasing awareness of homework challenges for students living in poverty, often without Internet access, known as the "homework gap" or "digital divide."
  • Research about the learning process has shown the importance of
  • – Formative feedback.
  • – A growth mindset.
  • – Brain research about factors influencing learning.
  • – Sleep and downtime.
  • Educational trends are changing the role of homework in the teaching and learning process:
  • – With the move toward standards-based learning and standards-based grading, homework is increasingly viewed as ungraded formative assessment.
  • – Educators have come to appreciate the motivational role of personalized learning, choice, and student self-assessment.
  • – The increased use of flipped learning has caused the homework task itself to change.
  • There has been an increase in the number of K–12 school policies limiting or eliminating homework at the elementary level.
  • There has been an increase in the number of K–12 school policies limiting the percentage homework may count in the grade or prohibiting teachers from counting homework in the grade.
  • We have evolved from a time when homework was assigned as tradition, with little thought given to how the task related to the ultimate learning outcome, to a time when its basic value to learning is questioned.
  • We have gone from the norm of vague or nonexistent homework policies to the norm of homework policies outlining the purpose and amount of homework and sometimes banning weekend or holiday homework.
  • As our knowledge of the brain has grown, we have come to value the role of feedback and respect the power of student mindset and attitude.
  • As the pace of our culture has accelerated at warp speed, we have become increasingly concerned about the role homework plays in the stress levels of K–12 students. We have begun to understand the importance of balancing work, play, downtime, and sleep to ensure the efficient functioning of a learning brain and the mental health of our children.
  • These concerns about "academic stress" and work-life balance for students have contributed to increasing parent activism about homework.

We have moved from blind acceptance of homework, to awareness and questioning of the practice, to understanding and advocacy for what is best for our students. May we continue to study, learn, reflect, and improve our practice of homework.

Sarah Sparks has issued a challenge to all stakeholders. Is homework necessary? Take a look and join listen in on one of my podcast where we will dialogue with staff and students about the homework topic.


How People Learn: A Landmark Report Gets an Update

By Sarah D. Sparks on October 8, 2018 3:40 PM

Learning is a conversation with the world, from a newborn's brain lighting up as his mother sings to him, to a teenager choking on a test for fear of fulfilling a stereotype, to elderly people heading off cognitive decline by learning a new language. In an update to its landmark reports on education research, the National Academies' new How People Learn II digs into what science can tell schools about how to build on students' culture and experience to improve learning.

Some of the contexts in which people learn have changed dramatically since the National Research Council's Committee on Developments in the Science of Learning published the original How People Learn book in 1999, and its 2005 follow-up report on teaching history, math, and science. Some of the research from that original report has become common knowledge but still sometimes difficult to implement. A case in point, one of the "key findings" of the Research Council in 1999 was the notion of student-centered learning: "the idea that students come to the classroom with preconceived notions of how the world works. If these notions are not engaged, students may fail to grasp new concepts that they are taught. For example, students may sometimes acquire knowledge for the purposes of a test but later revert back to their preconceived notions outside the classroom."

The new report expands on that idea, digging into the ways research suggests students' experiences affect how they engage with education and vice versa. "People do not simply collect memories, knowledge, and skills in a linear fashion, but through myriad processes that interact over time to influence the way they make sense of the world," said Cora Bagley Marrett, the former deputy director of the National Science Foundation, professor emeritus at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and chair of the committee that conducted the report.

The committee also confronted common teaching ideas that have not been borne out, such as teaching for different learning styles. "The appeal of this approach, which has gotten substantial public attention, is the premise that all students can succeed if the instruction is customized. However, experimental research has consistently shown that learning styles do not exist as described by the concept's proponents, so categorizing and teaching children according to such styles is problematic," they concluded.

While the report covers research on learning from birth through old age, its commission had some key conclusions for schools:

  • To be effective, teachers must understand how students' prior knowledge, experiences, motivations, interests, and language and cognitive skills interact with those of the teacher's own experiences and culture and the characteristics and culture of the classroom.
  • Students should be supported in directing their own learning, via targeted feedback, opportunities to reflect on what they've learned, challenges matched to their abilities, and help in developing meaningful goals.
  • Both curricula and instructional strategies should help students connect their academic learning goals to what they learn and do outside of school.
  • Teaching not just science or history content, but the specific language and practices of different disciplines, is critical to helping students develop deep understanding of those subjects.


The Power of Innovative Scheduling

Canady and Retting share their perspectives on innovative scheduling. Read and share your thoughts!


November 1995 | Volume 53 | Number 3

Productive Use of Time and Space Pages 4-10

Issue Table of Contents | Read Article Abstract

Robert Lynn Canady and Michael D. Rettig

Alternative schedules may not add hours to the school day, but they can vastly improve the quality of the time students spend at school.

Scheduling is a valuable but untapped resource for school improvement. Through our work in schools across the country, we have seen again and again how a well-crafted schedule can

  • result in more effective use of time, space, and resources (human as well as material);
  • improve instructional climate;
  • help solve problems related to the delivery of instruction; and
  • assist in establishing desired programs and instructional practices.

We believe that Deming was right when he said that it is more often the structure of an organization than the inadequacies of the people who work within it that causes problems (Bonstingl 1992). The examples we'll discuss only hint at the power of scheduling to improve schools. But, first, let's review some problems that scheduling can help alleviate.

Three Issues All Schools Face

Although scheduling varies from elementary school through high school, three areas of concern span all levels.

1. Providing Quality Time

Fragmented instructional time is an issue at all levels. In elementary school, a variety of practices contribute to this problem. For example, haphazardly scheduled pullout programs (for ESL or special education, for example) disrupt classroom instruction; and because the schedules of specialists (for music and art, for example) are created for periods of varying length, core teachers must plan instruction around the remaining chopped-up time. In addition, when special programs classes meet just once a week for a short period, students receive piecemeal instruction.

At the middle and high school levels, fragmentation occurs in a different way. Students traveling through a six-, seven-, or eight-period day encounter the same number of pieces of unconnected curriculum each day, with little opportunity for in-depth study. In middle schools, this problem may have been exacerbated by exploratory programs, which in many schools have evolved from risk-free explorations to full academic courses with tests, grades, and homework.

Recently we worked with a district where students spent four periods daily in English, mathematics, social studies, and science, and two periods in six-week exploratory “wheels.” In other words, students saw 4 core teachers and 12 exploratory teachers during the year. Is having so many teachers per day and per year consistent with what we know about middle school students?

2. Creating a School Climate

The daily schedule can have a great effect on a school's climate. At the elementary level, discipline problems can result from the way small-group reading and math instruction is scheduled. Many teachers continue to divide their classes into reading, language arts, and math groups, which meet separately with the teacher while other students complete worksheets or work in learning centers. All too often, teachers must interrupt small-group instruction to address discipline problems that arise in the back of the room.

In middle and high schools, traditional schedules create at least four situations that may contribute to the number of discipline problems.

  • Many disciplinary referrals result from scheduled transitions, when large numbers of students spill into hallways, lunchrooms, and commons areas, or congregate in locker rooms and bathrooms. If students are not sent to the office directly, the problems often carry over into the classroom, where teachers must deal with them before beginning instruction.
  • The assembly-line, traditional period schedule contributes to the depersonalizing nature of high schools. When teachers are responsible for 100–180 students daily, and students must answer to six, seven, or eight teachers a day, it is nearly impossible to develop close relationships, which may help reduce discipline problems.
  • Short instructional periods may also contribute to a negative classroom climate. When students who misbehave do not respond to a quick correction, many teachers send them to the office. With only 40- to 55-minute class periods, these teachers view any time taken away from classwork as unacceptable.
  • The middle school schedule, in particular, often makes teaming efforts difficult. Students in seven-period schools often are enrolled in three non-core classes, while the four-teacher teams—one teacher each from English, math, science, and social studies—are assigned five classes daily. Thus, during many periods of the day, 20 percent of the students are “off core.” As a result, teams must remain in a period schedule, and the team structure, which usually facilitates disciplinary control, is weakened.

3. Providing Varying Learning Time

Perhaps the most critical (and unresolved) time allocation issue that schools face is the indisputable fact that some students need more time to learn than others. In secondary schools, reliance on the Carnegie unit has made all students “Prisoners of Time” (National Education Commission on Time and Learning 1994). High schools, and to a lesser extent middle schools, experience this problem, especially in late January. After receiving their first-semester grades, some students conclude that they will not pass the subject regardless of their performance during the second semester. Believing they have nothing to gain by doing the work, some of these students act out and skip classes. In a way, we have created a system to handle students who need more time to learn: we give them Fs and make them repeat the course during summer school or the next academic year!

On the other end of the spectrum, possibilities for acceleration in U.S. schools are very limited. Most districts, however, offer one celebrated occasion for advancement. At the end of 7th grade in middle and junior high schools, teachers must decide whether or not a student should enroll in algebra during the 8th grade. This inflexible system forces instructors to make premature decisions about a student's potential in mathematics. If the school schedule were not as rigid, perhaps educators could make the decision to accelerate students at more appropriate times.

In elementary school, our usual reaction to the need for different amounts of time for learning is to provide individual assignments to those who learn quickly, and to regroup, slow down, and provide pull-out programs for those who need more time. The problems with these accommodations are that (1) sometimes the activities provided for those who learn quickly are thrown together haphazardly (Renzulli 1986), and (2) students placed in the lower groups fall farther behind. In addition, students in pullout programs often are stigmatized by their participation in them.

Scheduling as a Solution

Redesigning the school schedule can help address each of these three issues. We begin with the elementary school.

Elementary School Scheduling

A number of elementary schools across the country have adopted parallel block scheduling to reduce instructional fragmentation, improve discipline, and provide regularly scheduled, yet flexible, opportunities for extended learning enrichment (Canady 1988, 1990; Canady and Reina 1993). Figure 1 illustrates part of such a schedule, designed for four base teachers and an extension center.


Figure 1. A Parallel Block Elementary School Schedule for Four Base Teachers and an Extension Center


Teachers

50 mins

50 mins

50 mins

50 mins

Teacher A

Language Arts & Social Studies (Reading-Writing Groups 1 & 2)

Reading-Writing Group 1

Reading-Writing Group 2

Teacher B

Language Arts & Social Studies (Reading-Writing Groups 3 & 4)

Reading-Writing Group 3

Reading-Writing Group 4

Teacher C

Reading-Writing Group 5

Reading-Writing Group 6

Language Arts & Social Studies (Reading-Writing Groups 5 & 6)

Teacher D

Reading-Writing Group 7

Reading-Writing Group 8

Language Arts & Social Studies (Reading-Writing Groups 7 & 8)

Extension Center

Reading-Writing Groups 6 & 8

Reading-Writing Groups 5 & 7

Reading-Writing Groups 2 & 4

Reading-Writing Groups 1 & 3

Note: Depending on the size of the school, this plan can work with four 5th grade teachers, two 4th and two 5th grade teachers, or four teachers of four different grade levels.


Teachers A and B work with their homeroom classes for an uninterrupted 100 minutes to begin the time block shown. They can use this time for language arts and social studies or perhaps for a whole class reading lesson. Teachers A and B may team together for this block if desired.

During the next 50 minutes, Teacher A works with Reading-Writing Group 1; Teacher B instructs Group 3. Teaching about half of the class, the base teacher conducts a reading group, or a writers' workshop, or perhaps conferences with individual students. Discipline is improved because independent groups are no longer in the back of the room. The extension teacher picks up Reading-Writing Group 2 from Teacher A and Group 4 from Teacher B and escorts these students to the extension center.

At the end of this 50-minute period, the extension center teacher returns Reading-Writing Groups 2 and 4 to their classrooms and picks up Groups 1 and 3 for their extension time. The rest of the school day is devoted to math, science, music, the arts, and physical education. Sleepy Hollow Elementary School in Fairfax County, Virginia, has operated a similar schedule for the past four years.

In the extension center, students who need more time to learn receive assistance through reteaching and reinforcement, and they have opportunities for practice. Any pullouts for special services—special education, English as a second language, gifted and talented, or Chapter 1—are provided during extension center time. Students who have mastered basic concepts work on enrichment activities.

The extension center position can be staffed in different ways. Increasing homeroom size frees up regular teaching staff. An alternative is to staff the center with Chapter 1, English-as-a-second-language, gifted and talented, or special education teachers. Still other options are to use the computer lab or a foreign language program as the extension center or to rotate library/media, guidance, and reading enrichment professionals for a specific period of time (three weeks, for example).

Other Tips for Elementary Schools

  • Schedule all specialists for equal periods of instruction on a rotating schedule during the same time block each day. Consider four- or six-day cycles, rather than the unwieldy and unfair Monday through Friday schedule.
  • Rotate shared itinerant specialists who travel to different schools on a nine-week or semester basis, rather than two days a week here and two days a week there.
  • Schedule recess time contiguous to another class change such as for lunch or specials' classes to reduce time lost to movement.
  • Avoid short periods of time such as 15-minutes between lunch and specials. These often are wasted.

Middle School Scheduling Models

We'll look at three models at the middle school level.

The four-block schedule. One schedule being used with increasing frequency across the country greatly reduces fragmented instruction. In the four-block schedule, students spend one block of the day (about 90 minutes) in language arts, a second block in mathematics, and a third block in either social studies or science. The block of social studies/science is rotated every other day, every other unit, by semester, or on some other basis. Students spend the fourth block of the day in physical education, music, and/or exploratory courses, which meet for 90 minutes every other day. They attend only three academic courses daily.

Language arts and mathematics teachers teach three groups every day for the entire year; social studies and science teachers work with three groups per day, but with six groups for the year; and physical education, exploratory, and elective teachers work with only three groups per day. With this scheduling plan, both teachers and students experience less stress and fragmentation.

The four-block middle school schedule significantly reduces the daily number of class changes, thereby reducing discipline problems. Examples of schools operating this schedule during the 1994–95 year include: Newberry Middle School in Newberry, South Carolina; Goochland Middle School in Goochland, Virginia; and Wilbur Wright Middle School in Dayton, Ohio. Districts that operate the 4 × 4 semester block high school schedule may find this plan a logical transition for middle schools.

The 75-75-30 plan (Canady and Rettig 1993). W. Marshall Sellman School in the Madeira School District in Cincinnati, Ohio, implemented this unique 180-day school calendar for the 1994–95 school year. According to teachers, students, and parents, the program was a great success.

Under the Sellman plan, the school follows a fairly typical middle school team block schedule for the first 150 days. Courses end after two 75-day terms, and students begin their final six weeks of school enrolled in specialized courses, created and designed by teachers. Such specialized courses provide (1) additional learning time for students who have yet to master grade-level objectives, and (2) academically enriching activities for all students. Course titles at the Sellman School include Principles of Mathematics, Team-Accelerated Instruction, Water Science, Inventioneering, Mock Trial, and Fun with Poetry.

The concept-progress model. This approach is another attempt to address students' differing needs for learning time (Canady and Rettig 1992, Canady 1989). Several elementary and middle schools across the country are using it to provide mathematics instruction to heterogenous groups. Figure 2 illustrates one version of this plan.


Figure 2. A Concept/Progress Middle School Model for a Six-Day Cycle with 50- to 60-Minute Periods per Day


Teachers

1

Monday

2

Tuesday

3

Wednesday

4

Thursday

5

Friday

6 Monday

Math A

Concept Math Groups 1 & 4

Concept Math Groups 1 & 4

Progress Math Group 1

Progress Math Group 1

Progress Math Group 4

Progress Math Group 4

Math B

Progress Math Group 2

Progress Math Group 2

Concept Math Groups 2 & 5

Concept Math Groups 2 & 5

Progress Math Group 5

Progress Math Group 5

Math C

Progress Math Group 3

Progress Math Group 3

Progress Math Group 6

Progress Math Group 6

Concept Math Groups 3 & 6

Concept Math Groups 3 & 6

Computer Lab

Groups 5 & 6

Groups 5 & 6

Groups 3 & 4

Groups 3 & 4

Groups 1 & 2

Groups 1 & 2


Math teachers A, B, and C present the basic concepts of a mathematical topic to their entire classes two days of every six-day cycle. Math Teacher A's Concept Math Group meets on Days 1 and 2 of the six-day cycle. During concept math time, the teacher focuses on grade-level instruction, ideally using cooperative learning, providing direct instruction, and, when needed, illustrating with manipulatives. The teacher does not test and grade students in concept groups.

After working with their whole groups, Teachers A, B, and C divide students into two Progress Math Groups—temporary, flexible, homogeneous groupings of students, based on their understanding of the basic ideas taught in the Concept Math Group. Math Teacher A instructs Progress Math Group 1 on Days 3 and 4, and Group 4 on Days 5 and 6. (Note that Progress Math Groups 1 and 4 equal Teacher A's Concept Math Group.) Teachers monitor and adjust instruction during this time, providing enrichment and additional assistance as needed; however, Progress Math Groups remain on the same topic. For example, if teachers have planned to work on long division for 18 days, Progress Math Group 2 might focus on dividing two digits into three digits, while Progress Math Group 5 might be dividing three digits into four. Note, however, that all groups work in long division for the number of days determined by the pacing guide that teachers developed at the beginning of the school year. Students are graded based on their progress within the topic.

In the computer lab, similar adjustments are made in the selection of software for each group. The concept-progress model is just one way of designing the school schedule to serve students with varying instructional needs by providing

  • whole-group instruction without the pressure of testing and grading;
  • small groups so that teachers can monitor and adjust instruction without having to teach one group while policing another group; and
  • both extended learning and enrichment time on an individual student basis.

Other Middle School Scheduling Tips

  • Many middle schools can benefit from operating on some of the more popular high school block scheduling models, such as the Day 1/Day 2 schedule. Students have fewer classes daily, and fewer class changes are necessary.
  • Consider adding a nontraditional core teacher to the interdisciplinary team. At Glasgow Middle School in Fairfax County, Virginia, a foreign language teacher is now on each 8th grade interdisciplinary team. At other schools, related arts teachers are on teams on a rotating basis. For example, an art teacher might be the fifth person on a team for nine weeks of art, followed by nine weeks of computer technology, nine weeks of teen living, and nine weeks of drama. Being part of the team increases the likelihood that the content of these exploratory subjects will be integrated with the core.
  • Another way of reorganizing the 180-day calendar, which is similar to the 75-75-30 Plan, is the 35-(5)-35-(15)-35-(5)-35-(15) Plan. Each semester students attend regular classes for 35 days and have 5 days for reteaching and/or enrichment. Then they continue regular classes for 35 days and end the semester with 15 days for extended learning time or enrichment/electives (See Canady and Rettig 1995, Chapter 5).

High School Scheduling Models

During the past 10 years, high schools across the country have begun to implement block schedules to address curriculum fragmentation. Many schools operate alternate-day schedules, the 4 X 4 semester plan, and many variations (For a detailed treatment of these plans see Canady and Rettig 1995). Each plan can also have a positive effect on school discipline. Here are two examples.

  • A trimester plan with daily periods for extended learning. In the fall of 1994, Parry McCluer High School in Buena Vista, Virginia, used a trimester schedule with extended classes for enhanced learning (Canady and Rettig 1995, Chapter 4). In such a plan, students enroll in two classes per trimester; each class meets for two hours in the morning and reconvenes for an additional 45 minutes of extended learning time each afternoon. Nearly all students require this additional time for learning; however, a few have been permitted to contract out of the extended learning time for advanced study with another faculty member. An equally small number of students require more time than can be allocated each trimester to complete course objectives. If these students have worked hard and simply need more time, they may be granted an “Incomplete,” which they can make up during extended learning time of the next trimester.
  • A schedule that provides algebra for all students. In one school district—where 40 percent of the students enrolled in first-year algebra failed the course, and where approximately one-third of the students who had passed the course the previous year failed the state proficiency examination—we designed the following schedule to provide varying learning time for students in Algebra I.

As shown in Figure 3, four sections of Algebra I are scheduled in the same period or block, and the curriculum is divided into four distinct segments. During Quarter 1, all students begin together as heterogeneous groups with teachers A, B, C, and D. After completing Quarter 1, students who need more learning time are regrouped into a separate section, which repeats Part 1 with Teacher D during Quarter 2. Teachers A, B, and C continue Part 2 of the course with students who, at the time, are performing successfully. At the end of each quarter, teachers determine whether a regrouping is necessary. When a group must repeat one of the four parts of the course, we recommend using a different teaching approach—for example, having that teacher reteach the group using a software package in the computer lab or having one of the other four teachers reteach that part of the course.


Figure 3. A Middle School Schedule That Provides Varying Learning Times for Students Taking Algebra I


Quarters

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

Teacher A

Part 1

Part 2

Part 3

Part 4

Students take new course. Teacher offers new course.

Teacher B

Part 1

Part 2

Part 3

Part 4

Part 4

Computer Lab

½-credit electives available

Teacher C

Part 1

Part 2

Part 2

Part 3

Part 3

Part 4

Teacher D

Part 1

Part 1

Part 2

Part 2

Part 3

Part 3

Part 4

Part 4

Note: The Algebra I curriculum is divided into four parts. Quarters indicate the time it would normally take to complete 1/4 of the course. In a single period or A/B schedule, this would be nine weeks. In a 4 × 4 semester plan, this would be four and a half weeks. (For more information about these scheduling plans, see Canady and Rettig 1995.)


Figure 3 shows some students finishing the course in four quarters, and some in five, six, seven, or even eight quarters. Variable learning time is provided for students, and no student is forced to sit through a repeat of the entire class. The same idea shown in Figure 3 can be designed for English, particularly for grade 9 students, by basing the parts of the course on an identified sequence of writing and reading skills.

Other High School Scheduling Tips

  • Schools may periodically alter the regular schedule so that each class meets for a full day on a rotating basis. For example, in a six-period school (on a six-day cycle), teachers would meet with each of their five classes for a full day and then have a full day off for planning or professional development.
  • Some schools have scheduled one long lunch period rather than two or three short periods. During this extended time the library, gym, computer lab, and outdoor recreational areas are opened for student use. Teachers schedule office hours for extra help; club meetings and other activities also may be held. Several serving sites are necessary to accommodate students purchasing lunch.

Harnessing the Power of Scheduling

We've looked at ways that some elementary, middle, and high schools have redesigned their schedules to reduce curriculum fragmentation, discipline problems, and student failure. We need to move beyond individual school models of scheduling, however, and toward districtwide plans. Ultimately, we envision students progressing from school to school in a seamless design. Such a plan may even enable 5th and 8th grade teachers, for example, on an every-other-year basis, to continue with their students during their first year in middle or high school.

Only in the last decade have educators begun to capitalize on the potential of scheduling to improve schools. With open minds and equal doses of creativity and technical expertise, school administrators, teachers, parents, and students can harness this power.

References

Bonstingl, J. J. (1992). Schools of Quality: An Introduction to Total Quality Management in Education. Alexandria, Va.: Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development.

Canady, R. L. (October 1988). “A Cure for Fragmented School Schedules in Elementary Schools.” Educational Leadership 46: 65–67.

Canady, R. L. (March 1989). “Design Scheduling Structures to Increase Student Learning.” Focus in Change 1, 2: 1–2, 7–8.

Canady, R. L. (January 1990). “Parallel Block Scheduling: A Better Way to Organize a School.” Principal69, 3: 34–36.

Canady R. L., and J. M. Reina. (January 1993). “Parallel Block Scheduling: An Alternative Structure.” Principal 72, 3: 26–29.

Canady, R. L., and M. D. Rettig. (Summer 1992). “Restructuring Middle Level Schedules To Promote Equal Access.” Schools in the Middle: 20–26.

Canady R. L., and M. D. Rettig. (December 1993). “Unlocking the Lockstep High School Schedule.” Kappan: 310–314.

Canady R. L., and M.D. Rettig. (1995). Block Scheduling: A Catalyst for Change in High Schools. Princeton, N.J.: Eye On Education.

National Education Commission on Time and Learning. (1994). Prisoners of Time: Report of the National Education Commission on Time and Learning. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office.

Renzulli, J. S., ed. (1986). Systems and Models for Developing Programs for the Gifted and Talented. Mansfield Center, Conn.: Creative Learning Press.

Robert Lynn Canady is Professor, Department of Educational Leadership and Policy Studies, Curry School of Education, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA 22903-2495. Michael D. Rettig is Assistant Professor, School of Education, College of Education and Psychology, James Madison University, Harrisonburg, VA 22807.

Copyright © 1995 by Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development

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