Want Competency Ed? Change Teacher Policies First
        
        
        
			- By Dian Schaffhauser
- 12/08/14
Districts and schools that want to implement a  competency-based learning environment would do well first to focus on educators'  skills as well as the policies that could hold them back from success. So  asserts a new paper from school improvement nonprofit KnowledgeWorks and the International Association for K-12 Online  Learning (iNACOL).
The 18-page "Laying  the Foundation for Competency Education: A Policy Guide for the Next Generation  Educator Workforce" names seven new skills educators will need in  order to be effective in a competency model, including being able to provide "differentiated  support" to students; aligning instruction to "explicit, measurable,  transferable learning objectives"; and using formative assessments to  measure student progress and mastery.
Helping educators gain those skills, however, will require  federal and state policymakers to align policies and programs related to  pre-service preparation, teacher evaluation, state credentialing and professional  development. In many cases those policies need to start reflecting adoption of competency  practices for the educators themselves. For example, the report noted, in the  traditional model, teachers earn their degrees by completing a given number of  credit hours. In a competency model, those degrees are awarded "after  candidates build a portfolio of multiple forms of evidence that demonstrate  mastery of...competencies aligned to practice expectations."
Other areas of policy that must be updated are those that touch  on accountability, assessment, data, research and funding systems.
Authors Lillian Pace, senior director of national policy for  KnowledgeWorks, and Maria Worthen, iNACOL's vice president for federal and  state policy, undertook the report to advance "the national dialogue about  education reform, inspiring policymakers to implement a new vision for teaching  and leading that elevates the rigor and performance of our education system."
Their conclusion: Educators are "the most important  factor in the success of students." And education reform requires "educator  buy-in and capacity."
"The shift to competency-education must begin with the educator  workforce," noted Pace in a statement. "A competency-based system will  require educators to take on different roles and develop new skill sets. We must  overhaul our educator preparation and development systems to give these educators  the support they need to thrive in next-generation teaching environments."
"If we're envisioning a future that supports every student's  best chance at success, competency education is a viable option," added KnowledgeWorks  president and CEO, Judy Peppler. "Competency education will put students at  the center of learning by providing personalized learning opportunities throughout  their educational experiences. This paper outlines the policies that will make this  transformation possible."
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.