{"id":13779,"date":"2020-11-23T01:00:09","date_gmt":"2020-11-23T06:00:09","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/aurora-institute.org\/?post_type=cw_post&p=13779"},"modified":"2020-11-30T11:02:16","modified_gmt":"2020-11-30T16:02:16","slug":"lessons-from-tracking-student-flex-time-in-a-competency-based-high-school","status":"publish","type":"cw_post","link":"https:\/\/aurora-institute.org\/cw_post\/lessons-from-tracking-student-flex-time-in-a-competency-based-high-school\/","title":{"rendered":"Lessons from Tracking Student Flex Time in a Competency-Based High School"},"content":{"rendered":"
The previous blog post described<\/a> the \u201cflex-mod\u201d schedule that Legacy High School<\/a> is using to facilitate competency-based education. It divides the school day into 22 periods, or \u201cmods,\u201d that enable a variety of flexible scheduling innovations. Once the schedule was well-established, Legacy High School began working with REL Central<\/a> to investigate how it was being used and how to improve it.<\/p>\n REL Central, a federally-funded research center, worked with Legacy High School staff to develop an online time log for students to record how they spend their flex time. During five weeks spread across the 2018-19 school year, students were asked to complete the time log during selected courses that met near the end of the school day. They could complete the log on up to three days during each of those five weeks, or up to 15 times total.<\/p>\n Students reported how many minutes of flex time they had that day, how much of it they used for academic versus nonacademic pursuits in several categories, and how much flex time they spent on-campus versus off-campus. They were also asked how much of their flex-time activities were self-determined rather than assigned by a teacher.<\/p>\n In total, 495 students completed at least one time log. They reported having an average of 80 minutes per day of flex time, varying from 62 minutes for 9th<\/sup> graders to 109 minutes for 12th<\/sup> graders. Teachers only determined how 3% of flex time would be used (see figure below), so students were the primary decision-makers.<\/p>\n