Competency-Based
Progression
Sanborn Regional High School in Kingston, NH
1.
We
believe that all students can and must learn. In each of our courses, our
competencies include explicit, measurable, transferable learning objectives
that empower our students. They address both the application and creation of
knowledge and the development of work study practices.
2.
We
believe that all teachers must approach grading in the same manner. Grades
represent what students learn, not what they earn. We use a four-point letter
rubric scale to report both assignment and competency levels of achievement.
Numerical “grades” are used only to report final overall course grades so we
can compute class rank and GPA for college application purposes. We do not mix
academic grades with behavior grades.
3.
We
believe that the most significant learning takes place for our students through
reflection and reassessment. Our students use the feedback they receive
from rubrics to help them understand how to improve their learning.
4.
We
believe that our teachers are most effective when they work in teams. We use
the Professional Learning Community (PLC) structure to focus our teams on
student learning. Over the years, we have found ways to maximize the time
allotted for our teachers to collaborate with their PLC’s and this time is
available to our teachers every day.
5.
We
believe that assessment is meaningful and a positive learning experience for
students. Our teachers focus on providing quality aligned instruction and
performance assessment practices that are tuned to standards, providing
students with multiple opportunities to demonstrate mastery.
6.
We
believe that all students must receive timely, differentiated support based on
their individual learning needs. We recognize that this support cannot
always be embedded within the instructional time, and therefore our school has
developed a structure to provide this support school-wide at a dedicated time
each school day.
7.
We
believe that there are many ways for our students to demonstrate mastery of
competencies and thus earn credit for their graduation requirements. At our
school, we have expanded credit-bearing opportunities far beyond simple
traditional classroom courses. Through these alternative pathways, we have
started to create a system whereby our students can advance upon demonstrated
mastery.
8.
We
believe that competency education is rigorous. Rigor is not defined by how
much work we assign our students. It is defined by how deeply we engage them in
their thinking, understanding, application, and extension of the skills and
concepts presented to them through their coursework. We tune our instruction
and assessment to the work of Hess’s Rigor Matrix.
9.
We
believe that our school’s competency education philosophy aligns perfectly with
the competency based systems that colleges and universities are moving to.
To that end, we believe that a competency education model is the best way to
prepare our students for college and career.
10.
We
believe that competency education is ultimately transformed not by the way we
report grades or how we build assessments but rather by how we approach
instruction in the classroom. Our classroom teachers recognize that quality
instruction engages all learners each and every day.
This article was written originally for Competency Works
How My Understanding of Competency Based Education Has
Changed Over the Years
by Brian Stack • December 14, 2015 • 0 Comments
Each day as I interact with our teachers and our students, I
am reminded to what extent our decision to move to a competency based model has
positively influenced our school’s culture and climate, and our philosophy
about learning. Today we are graduating students who have never known any other
educational system than the one I described above. We spend a great deal of
time with our new staff each fall indoctrinating them with our beliefs about
teaching and learning. Each day I see small victories from our work that range
from students who are being held to higher standards to teacher teams who
continue to advance their own understanding and application of the competency
education philosophy. I challenge you to ask any of my teachers if they could
ever go back to a traditional mindset and I can assure you that you won’t find
one who would. We have truly transformed our professional culture into one
focused on student learning
Next week, I am excited to be sharing the work that my team
and I have done in New Hampshire on competency based education with a group of
South Carolina educators as part of the Transform SC institute on Meeting the
Needs of Every Student With Competency Based Progression. My preparation for
this institute has been an opportunity for me to reflect on what has now been a
six year journey with competency education with Sanborn Regional High School in
Kingston, NH. This past week, our school district was recognized for the second
year in a row as a “leader in competency education” by Tom Vander Ark’s
organization Getting Smart, noting that Sanborn was one of 30 School Districts
Worth Visiting in 2015.
Throughout my journey as a building principal navigating the
uncharted waters of a new competency education model, I have shared my
thoughts, my reflections, and my research through articles on Competency Works.
It has been three years since I wrote one of my first articles entitled Five
Things That Changed At My School When We Adopted Competencies. I am often asked
how my views of competency education have evolved during my tenure at Sanborn.
In that 2012 article, I talked about how our school community decided to “jump
into the deep end of the pool” of high school redesign in an effort to provide
a better learning experience for our students with a new competency based
education model. I noted some big changes for our school community that, at the
time, was in its second year of implementation of a competency education model
that was adopted by our entire K-12 district. We were a school who was still
very much in transition from an old way of thinking to a new one. We were
leveraging our grading and reporting structures to ultimately help us transform
instruction at the classroom model. Over the years, our understanding of
competency education has deepened. We continue to learn more about ourselves
each day through our work with our students and each other as professionals.
When visitors come to our school and talk with our teachers and our students,
here is what they often tell me they take away from their visit.
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