Skip to main content

Home/ Literacy with ICT/ Group items tagged timetable

Rss Feed Group items tagged

John Evans

UK students get their timetable app into iTunes Store - 2 views

  •  
    "Two 16-year-old Saltash students will see 18 months of software design work come to fruition when their new school timetable app goes live in Apple's iTunes Store on Thursday (September 8), the day students return to school. Ryan King and Ethan Pearce, of Saltash.net Community School"
John Evans

How Kids Learn Better By Taking Frequent Breaks Throughout The Day | MindShift | KQED News - 2 views

  •  
    "Excerpted from Teach Like Finland: 33 Simple Strategies For Joyful Classrooms (c) 2017 by Timothy D. Walker. Used with permission of the publisher, W. W. Norton.  Schedule brain breaks Like a zombie, Sami*-one of my fifth graders-lumbered over to me and hissed, "I think I'm going to explode! I'm not used to this schedule." And I believed him. An angry red rash was starting to form on his forehead. Yikes, I thought, what a way to begin my first year of teaching in Finland. It was only the third day of school, and I was already pushing a student to the breaking point. When I took him aside, I quickly discovered why he was so upset. Throughout this first week of school, I had gotten creative with my fifth grade timetable. If you recall, students in Finland normally take a fifteen-minute break for every forty-five minutes of instruction. During a typical break, the children head outside to play and socialize with friends. I didn't see the point of these frequent pit stops. As a teacher in the United States, I'd usually spent consecutive hours with my students in the classroom. And I was trying to replicate this model in Finland. The Finnish way seemed soft, and I was convinced that kids learned better with longer stretches of instructional time. So I decided to hold my students back from their regularly scheduled break and teach two forty-five-minute lessons in a row, followed by a double break of thirty minutes. Now I knew why the red dots had appeared on Sami's forehead."
Phil Taylor

At Calhoun School, Longer Classes in 5 Short Terms - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • If the subject matter was a bit unusual for high school students, the amount of time they had to grapple with it was more so — 2 hours 10 minutes, in what is called a class block. Long blocks became standard this year at Calhoun, as part of a radical attempt to alter the structure of the school day and school year.
1 - 3 of 3
Showing 20 items per page