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States

States Press Ahead on 鈥21st-Century Skills鈥

By Catherine Gewertz 鈥 October 13, 2008 6 min read
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In Wisconsin, more students are doing their work by collaborating with peers in other countries. In North Carolina, high school students must now show that they can do an in-depth research project and present it orally to graduate. West Virginia teachers are being trained to infuse skills such as teamwork and creativity into mathematics, social studies, and other core courses.

Those are just some of the ways states are trying to revamp education to meet mounting demands that students possess not only academic skills, but also a range of intellectual, social, and life skills needed to excel in college and the workplace.

Leaders in business and academia increasingly argue that in a highly globalized, technology-driven age, young people need to know how to innovate, solve problems, and work with people from other cultures as much as they need to know algebra and U.S. history. Many educators refer to those and a host of other competencies鈥攕uch as being literate in finance, civics, media, and technology鈥攁s 鈥21st-century skills,鈥 for their importance to students鈥 future success. (鈥溾楽oft Skills鈥 in Big Demand,鈥 June 12, 2007.)

The , a Tucson, Ariz.-based coalition of business leaders, has been helping nine states as they rework their academic standards, curricula, assessments, and other touchstones to ensure that students are well prepared for college or work.

鈥淔ifty years ago, the ticket up the economic ladder was content mastery of four or five subjects,鈥 said Ken Kay, the partnership鈥檚 president. 鈥淭oday, it鈥檚 the ability to think critically, solve problems, communicate, collaborate, use technology and be globally competent.鈥

State-Level Support

While many schools and districts have recognized those needs and begun moving to meet them, large-scale change can鈥檛 occur without support at the state level, Mr. Kay said.

In Iowa, for example, in response to a 2007 state law, the state board of education revised its core curriculum in April to include such skills as 鈥渆mployability鈥 and financial, technological, and health literacy.

The curriculum framework outlines a wide range of skills under employability, including students鈥 being able to work productively with others, demonstrate initiative, integrity, and leadership, and incorporate 鈥渄ifferent perspectives and cross-cultural understanding鈥 into their work.

The Iowa education department is working to develop model instructional units to acquaint teachers with new ways to cover course content while also infusing those 21st-century skills, said Judy Jeffrey, the state鈥檚 director of public instruction.

It is also offering training to district leadership teams this fall and winter on how to implement the new framework, she said.

鈥淭hese essential concepts and skills are much more complex for teachers to integrate into their classrooms,鈥 Ms. Jeffrey said. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e not content factoids.鈥

Wisconsin is rewriting its standards in English language arts and mathematics, using both the Washington-based for academic rigor and the Partnership for 21st Century Skills鈥 guidelines for the so-called soft and applied skills, said Paul Sandrock, the assistant director of the department of public instruction鈥檚 content and learning team.

The state has a particular interest in expanding students鈥 knowledge of other countries and cultures, an area of learning sometimes referred to as 鈥済lobal literacy.鈥 An international education council of scholars, activists, and educators, appointed by the governor and the state superintendent of schools, defined global literacy and recommended ways to put it into practice.

Among those recommendations are that all Wisconsin teachers and students learn a foreign language, and that curricula in all content areas include 鈥減roblem-solving with a global context.鈥

Wisconsin has established partnerships with France, Germany, Japan, and Thailand and is working on similar links with China and Mexico. Those relationships enable teachers to share ideas about teaching and learning, and offer opportunities for children, Mr. Sandrock said.

One school in Wausau, in central Wisconsin, connected its 8th graders with peers in Chiba, Japan, for a joint study of water-quality issues in their communities, he said.

鈥淲e want our students to leave 12th grade knowing that any issue they might tackle, people from around the world might not come at it from the same perspective, and that they need to learn from the perspectives of others,鈥 Mr. Sandrock said.

鈥楩uture Ready鈥

North Carolina has written standards for what teachers and principals must do to ensure that students are 鈥渇uture ready,鈥 said state board of education member Patricia N. Willoughby. That work will drive changes to the curriculum and to teacher professional development, she said.

The changing standards also inform North Carolina鈥檚 exploration of new territory in trying to design assessments to capture hard-to-measure skills.

North Carolina has been working with John D. Bransford, a University of Washington professor of education and psychology, on a prototype to gauge whether students have mastered content as well as work skills such as critical thinking, research, and media literacy, said Cindi Jolly, a consultant to the Center for 21st Century Skills.

The center is an effort launched in 2005 by North Carolina Gov. Michael F. Easley, a Democrat, to form partnerships with business and policy leaders to adopt curricula, assessments, and teaching techniques for the new skills set.

The prototype for a biology assessment, taken in a computer-based 鈥渧irtual鈥 environment, asks a student to act as a clinician, counseling prospective parents about their odds of having a baby with sickle cell anemia, said Ms. Jolly.

The student interviews the parents, conducts research, and provides that feedback to the parents, then answers multiple-choice questions and writes longer responses about the process, she said. The assessment could be used in classrooms to guide instruction, or as a test of students鈥 learning, she said.

鈥淐urrent assessments do a pretty good job of getting at whether students have specific content, but I don鈥檛 think they assess very well whether students can use and apply their knowledge in complex, novel situations,鈥 said Ms. Jolly, a former assistant superintendent of curriculum and instruction in Wake County, N.C. 鈥淎ssessing this way reflects real-world challenges and real-world decisionmaking.鈥

Assessment Challenges

Arnold Packer, an economist and senior policy fellow at Western Carolina University鈥檚 , said assessing students鈥 grasp of 21st-century skills is tricky, especially in the context of states鈥 accountability systems, which rely on standardized tests.

鈥淵ou really need more subjective assessments of performance on those kinds of skills,鈥 Mr. Packer said.

West Virginia rewrote its standards in 2005, prompted by an intensive examination of shortcomings in curriculum and testing that had led to a dip in scores on the National Assessment of 91制片厂视频al Progress, said state school Superintendent Steven L. Paine. In effect for the first time this year, they feature a 鈥渉igher level of cognitive demand,鈥 he said.

West Virginia has put together three levels of training to help the system adapt to the changes. State education department personnel got nine days of training a few years ago, and 475 of the state鈥檚 700 principals have attended its leadership institute, Mr. Paine said.

In addition, 1,200 of its 24,000 teachers have been through training, and the state has set up a 鈥溾 Web site featuring resources they can use to teach to the new standards.

Coverage of pathways to college and careers is underwritten in part by a grant from the Carnegie Corporation of New York.
A version of this article appeared in the October 15, 2008 edition of 91制片厂视频 Week as States Press Ahead on 鈥21st-Century Skills鈥

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