91制片厂视频

Special Report
Assessment From Our Research Center

It鈥檚 Hard to Shift to Competency-Based Learning. These Strategies Can Help

By Mark Lieberman 鈥 September 16, 2024 6 min read
A collage of a faceless student sitting and writing in notebook with stacks of books, math equations, letter grades and numbers all around him.
  • Save to favorites
  • Print
Email Copy URL

School districts in every state now have the green light to establish competency-based education programs and models in their classrooms鈥攂ut they have a lot of work to do on the operational side to make those efforts worth the investment of time and money.

Competency-based education refers to a diverse set of practices by which schools give students opportunities to learn at their own pace to master specific skills, often through projects of their choosing that dovetail with their interests. Several states have offered funding to schools to help them get competency-education programs off the ground, including , , and .

Educators are interested in the model and supportive of some of its key components, even if largely unfamiliar with the practice.

Forty-one percent of educators in a recent EdWeek Research Center survey said they鈥檇 read about competency-based education but never seen it in action or tried it. Another 26 percent said they鈥檇 never heard of it before taking the nationally representative survey of 868 educators, which was conducted May 29 to June 19.

In a sign of their interest, 56 percent of survey respondents said they鈥檇 like to learn more about it, and another 13 percent said they know something about it and would like to try it. (Nineteen percent said they had no interest at all.)

Also, a majority of survey respondents said that, in five years, they expect their district or school to have at least taken steps toward adoption of competency-based education in some form.

But many are concerned about potential roadblocks to making the most of funding opportunities designed to help districts transition to competency-based education.

Slightly more than half of survey respondents said a major drawback to pursuing competency-based education is that teachers don鈥檛 know how to do it. Forty-two percent said eliminating traditional grades would confuse parents and students about how much learning had taken place.

More than a third of respondents said their schools cannot afford the staffing necessary to pull off a transformation of their district鈥檚 learning model. And slightly less than a quarter say school buildings would need to be improved in ways that would be too costly. Additional costs might come, for instance, from adding instructional space to allow more students to learn outside the traditional learning model and investing in technology students can use to learn at their own pace.

A note about this model of instruction

Competency-based education, proficiency-based learning, mastery-based learning, personalized learning, student-centered education, and standards-based education are all terms that refer to the same instructional model: one in which students make choices about how they learn and demonstrate their knowledge, learn at a pace that might differ from their classmates鈥, receive individualized support based on their needs, and progress based on their mastery of course material instead of seat time.
See the for more details.

Experts on competency-based education say implementing the model is often tougher in a district where most staff members have no experience with it, or where they even lack familiarity with the concept.

鈥淪chools and districts with a strong prior standards-based culture had an easier time adapting,鈥 said Amy Johnson, an education professor at the University of Southern Maine who has conducted extensive research on schools鈥 implementation of competency-based learning.

But there are approaches that work. They take time, patience, and often money.

Roughly two-thirds of educators who answered the EdWeek Research Center survey said the emphasis in competency-based education on measuring achievement by skills mastered rather than time spent in school is a benefit. Sixty percent said the same about the opportunity for students to learn at a rate that works for them.

鈥淲hen competency-based systems are implemented well, they end the paradigm of teachers feeling that they need to go into the classrooms and teach all day by themselves, that they alone are responsible for whether their students fail or thrive,鈥 said Kate Gardoqui, senior associate for the Maine-based nonprofit Great Schools Partnership, which helps schools in several states transform their teaching and learning models. 鈥淚t sends the exact opposite message to teachers.鈥

Here are some of the operational moves districts implementing competency-based education should consider making鈥攁nd the hurdles they might encounter along the way, according to practitioners.

Get everyone on the same page

Teachers, principals, district leaders, students, and parents all need to understand their district鈥檚 specific definition of competency-based learning for the new initiative to take hold, said Gardoqui, who helped lead the transition to competency-based learning at a high school in Maine where she was an English teacher in the early 2010s.

Each school needs to have a set of clearly delineated definitions for practices like grading and reporting. No one should have to wonder what it means to be successful in school.

That would represent a marked contrast to the status quo in many schools. 鈥淜ids will often be like, everybody knows who the easy graders and the hard graders are,鈥 Gardoqui said. 鈥淧arents will say the same thing.鈥

Eliminating that uncertainty helps students understand what鈥檚 expected of them. District officials can also use these changes to pitch the new initiative to parents and community members as an effort to ensure all students have comparable experiences in the classroom.

Develop a portrait of a graduate, and orient students toward it

Instructional staff next have to develop master lists of all the skills students should have before they graduate. The language from those lists can filter down into classrooms and parent-teacher conferences.

But those lists don鈥檛 materialize overnight, in large part because staff have other pressing responsibilities that get in the way. Some schools in New York City, for instance, have taken a decade to develop them because teachers and staff there had so many other responsibilities to juggle, Gardoqui said.

See Also

Image of attributes of a graduate.
Parker Shatkin for 91制片厂视频 Week with iStock/Getty
States More States Are Creating a 'Portrait of a Graduate.' Here's Why
Libby Stanford, December 11, 2023
8 min read

Schools don鈥檛 have to do all this work on their own. Many find success participating in collaboratives like . Others seed the ground for a schoolwide competency-based model by allowing it to develop from the ground up in one or two departments that are particularly eager to forge ahead with it.

鈥淥nce one department is using those practices, they can become a little easier to spread those out across the school,鈥 Gardoqui said.

Be open to the potential benefits

Investing in new programs can be daunting, especially when a payoff could be years away.

But proponents of competency-based learning see the potential for these initiatives to cut down on the amount of time and money schools spend trying to identify students who need additional support.

鈥淲hen you have a gradebook that tracks more accurately where students are in their learning, and who needs help, you can get appropriate supports to students more quickly and more effectively,鈥 Gardoqui said.

Competency-based education programs also encourage more direct collaboration with families, said Paulina Murton, the executive director of Great Schools Partnership. That could give schools a leg up when it comes time to ask community members to support additional school funding by raising property taxes or approving bond issues.

Similarly, Murton sees competency-based learning as a potential tool to help improve retention of teaching staff, a steep and ongoing challenge in many parts of the country. If teachers feel more connected and aligned with each other, they鈥檙e more likely to want to stick around in their school building.

鈥淲hen we put students in the driver鈥檚 seat of their own learning, we can see a big increase in engagement,鈥 Gardoqui said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 just worth its weight in gold.鈥

education week logo subbrand logo RC RGB

Data analysis for this article was provided by the EdWeek Research Center. Learn more about the center鈥檚 work.

Events

Recruitment & Retention Webinar Keep Talented Teachers and Improve Student Outcomes
Keep talented teachers and unlock student success with strategic planning based on insights from Apple 91制片厂视频 and educational leaders.鈥
This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of 91制片厂视频 Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Families & the Community Webinar
Family Engagement: The Foundation for a Strong School Year
Learn how family engagement promotes student success with insights from National PTA, AASA鈥痑nd leading districts and schools.鈥
This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of 91制片厂视频 Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Special 91制片厂视频 Webinar
How Early Adopters of Remote Therapy are Improving IEPs
Learn how schools are using remote therapy to improve IEP compliance & scalability while delivering outcomes comparable to onsite providers.
Content provided by 

EdWeek Top School Jobs

Teacher Jobs
Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide 鈥 elementary, middle, high school and more.
Principal Jobs
Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
Administrator Jobs
Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
Support Staff Jobs
Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.

Read Next

Assessment Opinion 鈥楩ail Fast, Fail Often鈥: What a Tech-Bro Mantra Can Teach Us About Grading
I was tied to traditional grading practices鈥攗ntil I realized they didn鈥檛 reflect what I wanted students to learn: the power of failure.
Liz MacLauchlan
4 min read
Glowing light bulb among the crumpled papers of failed attempts
iStock/Getty + 91制片厂视频 Week
Assessment See How AP Exam Scores Have Changed Over Time
The College Board adopted a new methodology for scoring AP exams which has resulted in higher passing rates.
1 min read
Illustration concept: data lined background with a line graph and young person holding a pencil walking across the ups and down data points.
iStock/Getty
Assessment Here鈥檚 Why More Students Have Passed AP Exams in Recent Years
It isn't that the exams became easier, according to the College Board.
7 min read
Image of wooden block cubes showing the concept of climbing growth.
shutter_m/iStock/Getty
Assessment How a District Used the Biliteracy Seal to Expand Language Instruction
The St. Paul public schools in Minnesota has seen success in its Karen language program.
5 min read
Karen language students work on a presentation highlighting historical figures during a Karen for Karen speakers class at Washington Tech Magnet School in St. Paul, Minn., on May 22, 2024.
Karen-language students work on a presentation highlighting historical figures during a Karen for Karen speakers class at Washington Tech Magnet School in St. Paul, Minn., on May 22, 2024.
Kaylee Domzalski/91制片厂视频 Week