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Autor/inn/enFarbman, David; Kaplan, Claire
InstitutionMassachusetts 2020
TitelTime for a Change: The Promise of Extended-Time Schools for Promoting Student Achievement. Research Report
Quelle(2005), (40 Seiten)
PDF als Volltext kostenfreie Datei Verfügbarkeit 
Spracheenglisch
Dokumenttypgedruckt; online; Monographie
SchlagwörterExtended School Day; Extended School Year; Educational Change; Academic Achievement; Time Factors (Learning); Educational Finance; Public Schools; Charter Schools; Urban Schools; Mathematics Instruction; English Instruction; Enrichment Activities; Extracurricular Activities; School Community Relationship; Time on Task; Experiential Learning; Teacher Student Relationship; Working Hours; Teachers; School Personnel; Compensation (Remuneration); Fund Raising; Budgeting; Costs; Partnerships in Education; Student Attitudes; Parent Attitudes; Teacher Attitudes; Institutional Characteristics; Instructional Leadership; Faculty Development; Teacher Effectiveness; School Culture; Educational Improvement; Family School Relationship; Massachusetts; New York; Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment System
AbstractExtending the school day and year is not easy. The conventional calendar remains one of the most intractable features of the American educational system. Altering the traditional school schedule has significant ramifications for parents, students, teachers, and school administrators. This reform impacts student and family schedules, transportation arrangements, teacher compensation, pedagogy and curriculum, and other issues. This research project was fundamentally designed to understand how these challenges can be overcome by studying schools that have actually overcome them. How are schools able to implement a change of such magnitude in effective and sustainable ways? To provide insight on this question, Massachusetts 2020, with support from The L.G. Balfour Foundation, a Bank of America Company, engaged in a year-long study of extended-time schools to consider the range of issues that these schools have had to deal with in breaking with the conventional school calendar. The eight extended-time schools that Massachusetts 2020 examined for this project demonstrate that extending the time students spend in school is possible in a variety of settings, including district public schools, pilot schools, and charter schools, and through a range of funding and staffing innovations. Examination of these schools further reveals that there is no one correct model of an extended-time school. In fact, each school has a unique character that grows from its strong educational vision. But these schools do all share one core belief: that more learning time is the sine qua non upon which a successful school is built. Employing creativity and attention to detail, these educators then develop a school that deliberately departs from the standard calendar of 180 six-and-a-half-hour days. They expand upon this time for the express purpose of enhancing teaching and learning. The positive effects of having more time are evident throughout each school. Through longer class periods, individual assistance, and tutoring sessions, students spend more time on task than do students in schools operating on a conventional schedule. Studying these schools also reveals that despite the benefits of having more time than the conventional schedule allows, there are hefty challenges to extending the school day. Clearly, one of the most significant is funding to pay for additional staff time. (Contains 12 figures, 6 tables and 30 notes.) [Funding for this paper was provided by the L.G. Balfour Foundation. For "Time for a Change: The Promise of Extended Time Schools for Promoting Student Achievement. Executive Summary," see ED534911.] (ERIC).
AnmerkungenMassachusetts 2020. 24 School Street 3rd Floor, Boston, MA 02108. Tel: 617-723-6747; Fax: 617-723-6746; Web site: http://www.mass2020.org
Erfasst vonERIC (Education Resources Information Center), Washington, DC
Update2017/4/10
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