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Teachers and media specialists urge board to reject proposed 8-period elementary special schedule, endorse 7-period pilot

AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

Teachers, media specialists and other staff used public comment at the April 9 board meeting to oppose a proposed eight-section elementary special-area schedule and urged the board to stick with or refine a seven-section pilot that preserves transition and planning time.

Several CUSD elementary specials teachers, media specialists and school staff used the public-comment portion of the April 9 meeting to press the governing board to reject a proposed eight-section daily specials schedule and instead continue with or refine the seven-section pilot the district tested at some schools.

What commenters said: Speakers described multiple operational problems they say would arise under an 8-section model. Major concerns raised by several commenters included: - Transition time and instructional continuity: Teachers said a five-minute buffer between special classes (included in the seven-section pilot) is instructional time for greeting, calm dismissal, and transition; removing the buffer would force back-to-back classes with little time to set up centers or instruments and would reduce actual instructional time. - Loss of prep and planning: Presenters said…

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