This would be a good all-school read for staff who are beginning to explore competency-based education. The book is short, and it provides a brief overview of many CBE topics but does not provide in-depth points for any of these topics. That’s a good thing for those who are just learning about CBE. It might be a frustrating read (or perhaps a good reminder/review) for those who have read other books on the subject and already have a deeper knowledge base. I like the way the book is organized; the reader takes a journey step by step in an order that makes sense. The author doesn’t seem to be sharing his unique perspectives, but rather he offers highlights of others’ work and ideas. As I said, there is nothing wrong with that because this book is a good stepping stone to bigger conversations about the topics, and the author provides concrete steps and examples to explain theories. I’ve attended enough workshops and conferences lately, that I appreciate those specific steps and points for how to go about making this change.
• Five levels to change to CBE
Establish a safe and collaborative culture (PLC, common values, beliefs, standards, grading, conduct a school climate survey)
Ensure effective teaching in every class (same expectations and standards for same course taught by different teachers)
Create a guaranteed and viable curriculum (based on research, standards, competencies)
Create valid assessment to measure the stated/taught curriculum (organized by measurement and topic, not weighted)
Establish leadership and support (need time, technical assistance, software, outreach to all stakeholders, a process to evaluate effectiveness and gather feedback, and accountability)
• Curriculum and Assessment
Use trend scoring (no averaging)
Eliminate using zeroes
Eliminate bonus points
Eliminate weighted grades
Assess on the standard/competency (not the time invested in completing the task)
Define purpose of homework and provide a homework policy that is not punitive (10 minutes per grade level)
Ensure teachers who teach the same course adhere to same expectations and grading, use same performance assignments
From trend scoring and no zeroes or weighted grades to the purpose of homework and five step/level plan to implementing CBE, the book prompts the reader to reflect and ponder these changes and to question long held (and I will just say it - wrong!) beliefs about education, particularly when it comes to grading.