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Type of Speech: 
Definition: 

Secondary school organizational model implementing longer class periods (blocks) in the school day.

Additional Information: 

Block scheduling arises from a reform initiative suggesting that students benefit from spending a longer period of time with one subject than the fifty minutes per class period allowed in the traditional scheduling model. Advocates of block scheduling argue that longer class periods allow teachers and students to engage in more complex lessons (such as project work or lab work), permit the development of better teacher-student relationships, and streamline administrative procedures (such as taking roll).