{"id":1284,"date":"2015-08-24T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2015-08-24T04:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/aurora-institute.org\/blog\/global-highlights-a-scan-of-high-performing-countries-using-elements-of-competency-based-education\/"},"modified":"2022-11-04T17:21:46","modified_gmt":"2022-11-04T21:21:46","slug":"global-highlights-a-scan-of-high-performing-countries-using-elements-of-competency-based-education","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/aurora-institute.org\/blog\/global-highlights-a-scan-of-high-performing-countries-using-elements-of-competency-based-education\/","title":{"rendered":"Global Highlights: A Scan of High-Performing Countries Using Elements of Competency-Based Education"},"content":{"rendered":"
Policymakers and educators in the U.S. can learn important lessons from high-performing education systems around the world. Last year, Competency<\/em>Works<\/a> (an iNACOL initiative) surveyed and studied several high-performing countries\u2019 elementary and secondary education policies and practices.<\/p>\n This blog explores how three high-performing countries demonstrate elements of competency education within their systems.<\/p>\n What are the elements? Competency<\/em>Works\u2019\u00ad\u00ad 5-part definition of high-quality competency education is:<\/p>\n Competency-based progressions are fundamental to personalizing learning at scale.<\/p>\n One Canadian province, British Columbia, adopted an education plan, the \u201cK-12 Innovation Strategy<\/a>,\u201d to create more personalized learning opportunities for all students within the province.<\/p>\n Personalizing learning for every student involves curriculum redesign. The new curriculum is based on guiding principles that increase autonomy at the school level, provide greater curricular flexibility, and focus attention on students demonstrating competency on higher order skills. These guiding principles include: \u009e<\/p>\n British Columbia\u2019s plan offers greater autonomy to teachers, who permit students to choose how they \u201cshow what they know\u201d and demonstrate competency on deeper learning outcomes. Educators can maximize innovation, personalization, creative thinking, and collaboration to address the needs of diverse learners in different contexts.<\/p>\n Canada consistently outperforms the United States on PISA exams in math, science, and reading.<\/p>\n Finland has consistently scored near the top of PISA rankings with unparalleled equity in performance amongst its students. The country\u2019s education system is designed to foster student agency, responsibility, and growth through self-directed, autonomous learning, especially in the later high school grades.<\/p>\n Finland\u2019s national curriculum framework provides general learning objectives and goals, but local schools decide on standards, learning objectives, teaching methods, and detailed outcomes. There are clear rubrics for what it looks like when a student masters the standards at a high level. The national curriculum framework includes common assessment criteria, but teachers and students have a tremendous amount of freedom in how they teach and learn.<\/p>\n Teachers assess student learning through ongoing performance-based, formative assessments. Finnish schools provide significant supports for students in need and who are struggling. Performance tasks require students to demonstrate what they know and can do. Teachers work with students to ensure they are mastering the material. Students understand their progress and help to co-design their own learning experiences. The system is designed to foster academic skills and dispositions to prepare them for future success.<\/p>\n In the tenth through twelfth grades, students engage in self-directed, self-paced learning. During these years, students build their own personalized learning schedules. They complete courses at a pace appropriate to their abilities and unique circumstances. Most complete the prescribed courses in three years, though some students progress more rapidly or more slowly.<\/p>\n Clear learning objectives, assessments that are meaningful to students, timely supports and interventions, and a focus on important skills and dispositions are all elements of competency-based education. Finland\u2019s system ensures students master skills at a high level and can demonstrate these skills through performance-based assessments.<\/p>\n While Scotland is part of the United Kingdom, it sets its own education policies. In 2012, the country scored well above average on PISA.<\/p>\n Scotland gives schools explicit flexibility to provide a range of progression pathways appropriate to students\u2019 needs and local circumstances.<\/p>\nElements of Competency Education<\/strong><\/h3>\n
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Competency Education Abroad: Highlights from Canada, Finland and Scotland<\/strong><\/h3>\n
British Columbia (BC), Canada<\/em><\/h4>\n
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Finland<\/em><\/h4>\n
Scotland<\/em><\/h4>\n