{"id":16438,"date":"2023-01-03T12:00:57","date_gmt":"2023-01-03T17:00:57","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/aurora-institute.org\/?post_type=cw_post&p=16438"},"modified":"2023-01-30T15:28:02","modified_gmt":"2023-01-30T20:28:02","slug":"personalized-learning-plans-at-bellows-free-academy-in-fairfax-vermont","status":"publish","type":"cw_post","link":"https:\/\/aurora-institute.org\/cw_post\/personalized-learning-plans-at-bellows-free-academy-in-fairfax-vermont\/","title":{"rendered":"Personalized Learning Plans at Bellows Free Academy in Fairfax, Vermont"},"content":{"rendered":"
This is the second blog post based on Jensen Welch\u2019s <\/span><\/i>dissertation research<\/span><\/i><\/a>.\u00a0<\/span><\/i><\/p>\n At Bellows Free Academy (BFA) in Fairfax, Vermont, Personalized Learning Plans (PLPs) aim to allow students to design their own pathway toward proficiency-based graduation and provide a forum for developing student agency. Despite numerous iterations of the PLP requirements at BFA, we recognized that student and adult engagement with the PLP was inconsistent, and the clarity about why students have PLPs was insufficient. Additionally, we admitted that after ten-plus years we had never adequately sought student input in designing the PLP process. The need for change and the urge to include our students\u2019 voices in the revision prompted the youth participatory action research described in the <\/span>previous blog post<\/span><\/a>. This research resulted in revisions to our PLP that focused on building student engagement in the high school experience at BFA.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n PLP\u2019s in Vermont are a requirement of the 2013 legislation <\/span>Act 77<\/a>, the Flexible Pathways Initiative. This policy paved the way for programs around flexible and alternate pathways toward graduation, including proficiency-based learning and proficiency-based graduation requirements, and the rollout of PLPs for all students in Vermont high schools. The details of flexible pathways, PLPs, and proficiency-based graduation are outlined in the state\u2019s <\/span>Education Quality Standards<\/a>, published in conjunction with the Act 77 law. In true Vermont, independent fashion, high schools were given individual discretion as to if and how changes should be implemented. Thus, each high school has developed their own structures and systems to meet the goals of Act 77. \u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n BFA Fairfax has used the spiral image shown here as a model for our personalized learning process, while continuously reviewing, revising, and refining our flexible pathways and proficiency-based instruction to provide the most relevant and robust learning opportunities for all students. <\/span>The youth participatory action research that took place in the spring of 2022 identified strengths to build on and recommendations which prompted the revisions that follow.<\/span><\/p>\n BFA Fairfax\u2019s PLP process has always consisted of two distinct parts. First, students build a portfolio website as a place to begin to share who they are as a person and a learner. The portfolio is a place to store evidence of student growth on transferable skills and academic proficiencies, and a place to keep track of activities, awards, and goals for the future. The students\u2019 portfolio websites are their own and the students make them uniquely theirs with pictures and designs of their choosing. As a school we also use the PowerSchool platform to monitor progress, and produce our report cards and transcripts. The second component of the PLP process is an exhibition presentation that students give in the spring of both their sophomore and senior years to a small group of family, friends, and faculty to share their progress and successes.<\/span><\/p>\nRecommendations from the Youth Participatory Action Research<\/span><\/h2>\n