| Over the course of a year you will
take eight different classes, each one for three
and one-half weeks (18 class days) at a time. Classes
usually meet from nine to noon every week day, so
afternoons are available for labs, studying, or
researching. And at the end of the block, you'll
have a four day break to refresh for the next block.
Here's an example: |
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With the focused calendar (block system), we
break down barriers of time. Because there are no 50-minute
class periods, no bells, no other classes to be rushing off
to, you can take your time to absorb what you are studying
- not just memorizing information.
When your discussion of capital punishment in
The People Shall Judge gets intense, you won't have
to miss any of it. On the verge of discovery in Organic Chemistry,
you can continue to learn, not hurriedly dismantle your lab
so another class can start.
Catch the Rhythm
There is a rhythm to the block plan, an ebb and flow of learning.
The first week of class, you get to know everyone and begin
to realize what the class is really about. By the second week,
you find yourself debating with classmates the issues at the
core of your subject. By the end of the third week, as you
work on your final project and prepare for your final exam,
you'll find you've immersed yourself in the course in a way
not possible under a traditional calendar. Tusculum has been
following this innvative pattern for about a decade now, and
our graduates tell us repeatedly that the focused calendar
improved both the quality and depth of content of their higher
education experience - it prepared them for the "real"
world.
Building Blocks
Because you complete one class before moving on to the next,
you expand your mind one block at a time. But, like the blocks
you stacked on top of each other as a toddler, each course
builds on what has gone before.
How It Works
At Tusculum, a semester is comprised of four blocks,
each three and one-half weeks long. A
student takes one course per block. This allows our students
and faculty to concentrate on a particular course without
the distraction of having to prepare for other courses at
the same time. This calendar was implemented in order to produce
a distinctive teaching and learning environment.