{"id":2192,"date":"2017-03-30T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2017-03-30T04:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/aurora-institute.org\/blog\/staying-the-course\/"},"modified":"2019-12-16T12:55:34","modified_gmt":"2019-12-16T17:55:34","slug":"staying-the-course","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/aurora-institute.org\/blog\/staying-the-course\/","title":{"rendered":"Staying the Course"},"content":{"rendered":"

\"\"<\/a>This post first appeared on CompetencyWorks<\/a> on January 18, 2017.\u00a0<\/em><\/p>\n

This is the final article in the series\u00a0Implementing Competency Education in K-12 Systems: Insights from Local Leaders<\/a><\/em>.<\/em><\/p>\n

Many districts are converting to competency education in states that have not yet begun to take the steps toward creating the vision and policies to support competency education. Even in states that have embraced competency education, leaders may need to respond to policies that have not yet been re-aligned. Thus, leaders must learn to stay true to their vision and purpose in navigating state policy. They may turn mandates into opportunities or actively work in partnership to co-create the new policy infrastructure. Essentially, they operate beyond the boundaries of the policies so that decision-making continues to be student-centered.<\/p>\n

One of the leadership functions needed to stay the course is being able to turn top-down compliance requirements into opportunities to reinforce the empowered culture of learning and improvement. Superintendent of\u00a0Chugach School District<\/a>\u00a0Bob Crumley talks about how he manages mandates by stating, \u201cI\u2019ve learned to see mandates from the state as opportunities. We will meet the letter of the law, but we aren\u2019t going to let the tail wag the dog. For example, we have a state mandate about including state assessment scores in teacher evaluations. We have a great teacher evaluation tool developed by teachers and our administrative team. I\u2019m not going to make any changes to the evaluation tool that causes a loss of ownership. Instead, I\u2019m going to tell our teachers that there are state requirements we need to meet, and we\u2019ll take this opportunity to see if we can improve the evaluation tool to help us get better at serving our kids. If we said that we were doing it only because the state required us to, it would send the wrong message to teachers and students. We look to see the value and opportunities that develop when outside forces require us to change and adapt. Continuous improvement is a core value and process at Chugach School District.\u201d<\/p>\n

States and districts are also finding ways to work together to advance competency education. For example, four districts in New Hampshire are partnering with the Department of Education to pilot the development of local performance-based assessments that will eventually lead to a state-wide system. These assessments, known as\u00a0Performance Assessment for Competency Education or PACE<\/a>, are designed to provide richer feedback to teachers and students in a much more timely fashion than state assessment systems.<\/p>\n

Sanborn principal\u00a0Brian Stack<\/a>\u00a0advises school and district leaders that, \u201cMaking the transition from traditional to competency-based grading is messy. No matter how much you plan for it, administrators and teachers will feel a sense of building the plane while flying it in those first few years of implementation. Stay the course in the face of adversity. Stay true to yourself and to the model. Trust that your teachers will stand with you, and together you will face the challenges that will lie ahead and find a way to work through them as a school community. Your patience and persistence will be rewarded.\u201d<\/p>\n

Bottom line, leaders will need to turn to shared leadership strategies to empower educators and engage the community through the ups and downs of the change process, even though there will be pressure to become the sole decision-maker.<\/span><\/p>\n

Concluding Comments<\/h3>\n

During our research over the last five years, we have had powerful conversations with extraordinary educators leading the transformation to competency-based education. The conversations with district and school leaders have provided the insights and lessons learned throughout this paper.<\/p>\n

The series of posts has explored four stages of the process of converting a district or school to competency education, emphasizing leadership strategies, community engagement, development of a culture of learning, and design decisions for creating an instruction and assessment model. The insights provided by innovators offer a shared recognition of opportunities and challenges encountered in the transition. The evolution to a district-wide competency-based system will not be easy, yet the strategic recommendations from cutting-edge leaders provide a basis to develop strategies to ease and accelerate the transition.<\/p>\n

It is important to note that this journey requires a shift in paradigm from a system-centered approach to one that is learner-centered. Leaders and educators must understand the research on teaching and how students learn. They will need to redesign their instruction and practices based on these understandings, placing students at the center. Teachers have described their transition year to competency education as the most challenging year of their professional lives, the most reflective, and also the most meaningful. They have also emphasized that they cannot imagine going back to the old way of doing things.<\/p>\n

As your district or school transitions toward competency education, don\u2019t expect to immediately observe wholesale changes in the classroom. Jonathan Vander Els and Ellen Hume-Howard both note, \u201cA visitor checking out classrooms at the Memorial Elementary School might be surprised at how traditional everything looks. It\u2019s the little things that might catch your eye, however: the charts and graphs on the walls depicting student learning targets, the student work displayed with the standards identifying the learning outcomes, and the conversations students have identifying precisely what they are working on.\u201d In these early stages, teachers are busy collaborating with their peers and building new skills. In later stages, as teachers become comfortable in a competency-based learning environment, they will begin bringing new ideas to their leaders and pushing the concepts of what learning looks like as they co-design learning experiences with students that blur the boundaries of school walls, geography, and time, using technology and expanding opportunity for anywhere learning.<\/p>\n

It is our hope that the discussion offered here will prepare you to begin the transformational process to design schools where success is the only option for students. As you enter this new phase and develop your own strategies and lessons learned, we hope you share them with your fellow innovators and peers on CompetencyWorks.<\/p>\n

Again, thank you to these leaders for their commitment to share their experiences, their creativity in redesigning the system, and their continued vision of transforming the education system into a platform for student empowerment, equity, and success.<\/p>\n

For more information, explore this whole blog series:<\/h5>\n