- THESE ARE NOT SEMINAR COURSES. This is not designed to shove as many students into a classroom as possible. Properly conducted, each class should contain the following three elements of learning: Textbook, Application, Discussion*.
- These class schedules are currently being used in both public and private schools using the exact same length of day, week, and year as we are. Furthermore, the students get the same or more learning time because this schedule eliminates the number of times students have to change class rooms per day.
- Think of it this way: your child spends at least 14 years in the car observing how to drive. They spend weeks studying the material to pass the written exam for their learners permit. But despite how much they think they know, they discover the challenges of applying everything they have learned when actually being behind the wheel. You can apply this to a more technical scenario: Students spend years in medical school, but they aren’t licensed as doctors or nurses until they do internships/residencies where they take what they have learned in the class room and apply it. What the fewer and longer class system does is allow more actual application time of lessons learned for a better mastery of material. This is especially important in the stem base curriculum.
*Some parents have expressed concern that the longer class periods might challenging their students’ attention span. This is why the integrated learning process keeps things engaging enough to hold every student’s attention.
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