School rolls out Flex Time program

Alternative Copy Story and Photos by Luke Dickinson

In addition to the new building expansions and upgrades and a larger school student body, students can also expect a change to their schedules with Flex time; a free period of 40 minutes which will take place between third and fourth hour every Tuesday and Thursday.

Flex time is expected to build relationships for staff and students, provide academic equity and improve the social and emotional well-being of students. With the new EDU Pass app, students can choose to be a part of clubs, study hall or even socialize with friends during Flex time.

With the ninth graders being brought up to the high school this year,  a lot has been changed in the school in hopes that the transition will be easy for all grades. Flex time is one of those changes.

We formed a ninth grade transition committee and flex time was a product of that. We thought it would be a helpful time for not only ninth graders but for all the grades.

— Katie Barre

teacher Katie Barre, who also is a member of the Flex time committee,  said.

When students are allowed to choose their location for Flex time, they can do so by checking into a teacher’s class or location with the EDU Pass app, which can be downloaded on their phone. The app allows students to search for teachers to go to during Flex time and it even allows them to see where their friends will be headed during the free period. However, the app does offer a “stealth in” feature, which allows students to pick a location without their friends being able to see where they are if they desire a quiet study.

With the app crashing in the first week of it being used by the roughly 3,000 students of Stillwater, it was put under question whether the app would work for the school at all. However, counselor Kate Nelson explains that if the app is used throughout the week by students over different times, the app should work.

“The app was discovered when Principal Bach was visiting other schools, it was what those schools were using. It was developed by students who were computer whizzes and have now graduated. If the company does not fix the problem, students using it during the week and not all at once should still allow us to be able to use the app,” Nelson said.

If the app does work for the school, it will be essential to students when they are in the process of planning what they will do for their Flex time.

While the majority of Flex times will be free for students to choose what activities to participate in, one-fourth of the Flex times will be dedicated to personalized planning, such as ACT Prep, MCIS planning or registrations. For these sessions, students will be placed into their scheduled rooms, which they sat in on during the first day of Flex time, with the teacher who is meant to be their students’ adult advocate for all four years of high school.

When asked why Principal Robert Bach, decided this was a necessary change to our school, Nelson recalled Bach’s visits to Mahtomedi High School and Centennial High School, which took place in last April, “He researched and visited quite a few schools and received a lot of positive feedback. He wanted for students to be able to alleviate stress and have a time during the day to access teacher,” Nelson said.

Bach’s visits to these high schools, which have their own versions of Flex time, was where he got the idea for Flex time at our school. Bach decided providing students with a free time, where they could choose what they do, would be a beneficial change for Stillwater students.

However, with Flex time being new this year, many returning students to Stillwater Area High School were skeptical of the idea, even after first trying it out, “It definitely makes things more rushed [in regular class] which makes teachers and us students slightly more stressed,” senior Katy Hohenstein said.

Despite Hohenstein admitting that she feels her classes are more rushed, she does feel that Flextime is a good thing because it allows her to do her homework in school without getting distracted and says she would have liked it if Flex time had always been offered to students, “But I wish I could have had it when I was in the beginning years of high school.”

Flex time was a carefully thought out free period for our school and has already received many positive reviews from students. While it has encountered a hiccup or two during its first takeoff, many staff members like Nelson, remain hopeful and are excited with what the school will learn from Flex time in the future.

“I have already heard from an overwhelming amount of students that they like Flex time. But it is new and we all, including the staff have a little bit of learning to do.”