{"id":12851,"date":"2020-06-10T01:00:48","date_gmt":"2020-06-10T05:00:48","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/aurora-institute.org\/?post_type=cw_post&p=12851"},"modified":"2020-06-16T09:57:07","modified_gmt":"2020-06-16T13:57:07","slug":"competency-frameworks-and-judicious-content-selection-at-south-bronx-community-charter","status":"publish","type":"cw_post","link":"https:\/\/aurora-institute.org\/cw_post\/competency-frameworks-and-judicious-content-selection-at-south-bronx-community-charter\/","title":{"rendered":"Competency Frameworks and Content Selection at South Bronx Community Charter"},"content":{"rendered":"
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South Bronx Community Charter High School<\/a> (SBC) in New York City has deeply embraced competency-based education since it opened in 2016. The school\u2019s effective transition to remote learning during the COVID-19 pandemic led me to a recent conversation with John Clemente, the school\u2019s co-founder and executive director, and also a member of the Competency<\/em>Works Advisory Board.<\/p>\n SBC emerged from the Expanded Success Initiative, an effort by the New York City Department of Education to reduce disparities in educational outcomes for young Black and Latino males. The first phase of the initiative began in 2011 and focused on direct investment in 40 schools that had already shown promise on reducing these disparities. The second phase began in 2013 with a year of creating new school designs with \u201cradically different core principles, beliefs, and practices\u201d and the aim of improving outcomes for all young men and women of color.<\/p>\n Clemente and others leading this work supported the 2014 launch of three district schools using the model they developed, followed by the South Bronx Community Charter in 2016. Growing by one grade per year, this is SBC\u2019s first year with a graduating class. Their current enrollment is about 400 students with 98% Black or Latinx, 8% English language learners, 23% with IEPs, and 85% \u201cfacing economic hardship\u201d by the city\u2019s measures.<\/p>\n SBC\u2019s Competency Framework<\/strong><\/p>\n SBC has done great work in developing a competency framework that other competency-based schools can learn from and adapt for their own development. A key element<\/a> of competency-based education is that \u201cRigorous, common expectations for learning (knowledge, skills, and dispositions) are explicit, transparent, measurable, and transferable.\u201d<\/p>\n Working with the Center for Collaborative Education, SBC developed their competency framework during the year before opening the school. It\u2019s organized into 66 \u201cattainments\u201d for college and career readiness that lay out essential knowledge, skills, and behavior in \u201cI can\u201d statements designed to be clear and understandable to students and adults. For example, some of the attainments across a range of knowledge, skills, and behavior include:<\/p>\n\n