2020
DOI: 10.1002/cbe2.1228
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Making sense of K‐12 competency‐based education: A systematic literature review of implementation and outcomes research from 2000 to 2019

Abstract: Background Competency‐based education (CBE) is a systems‐change approach intended to re‐shape traditional understandings of what, when, where, and how students learn and demonstrate academic knowledge and skills. Research on the factors that affect K‐12 CBE implementation and the efficacy of different approaches has not yet been meticulously reviewed. Aims The purpose of this literature review was to examine the research on K‐12 CBE for factors that affect implementation, student outcomes, and the relationship… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(26 citation statements)
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References 27 publications
(77 reference statements)
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“…Such prescription is not only typical of fixed-pace methods but contradictory to the 'reality that people master subjects at different rates and bring diverse levels of prior experience and knowledge to that mastery' (Johnstone & Soares, 2014). Self-paced, individualized learning, which is a core principle of the competency-based model to which the DSE program subscribes is opposed to fixed-paced learning (Evans et al, 2020). CBE is founded on the assumption that individual learners pursue unique learning goals based on their unique experiences and diverse levels of mastery.…”
Section: Discussion and Con Clus I Onmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Such prescription is not only typical of fixed-pace methods but contradictory to the 'reality that people master subjects at different rates and bring diverse levels of prior experience and knowledge to that mastery' (Johnstone & Soares, 2014). Self-paced, individualized learning, which is a core principle of the competency-based model to which the DSE program subscribes is opposed to fixed-paced learning (Evans et al, 2020). CBE is founded on the assumption that individual learners pursue unique learning goals based on their unique experiences and diverse levels of mastery.…”
Section: Discussion and Con Clus I Onmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Another inherent assumption is that 'teacher trainees' shall attain the prescribed competencies after 'spending 2 years of study in teacher colleges' (MoEVT, 2013, p. 10). Such a strong prescription of time and pace reflects emphasis on time-based and group-based learning (Evans et al, 2020). In this context, prescribed competencies are expected to be mastered uniformly by all learners regardless of their individual differences, entry credentials, learning interests and learning styles.…”
Section: Fixed-paced Learningmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…After that, the idea of CBA entered the academic field by Tyler, Wheeler, Bloom and Mager with the theoretical presented between the 1940s and 1950s. After the 1970s-1990s, many states in the USA adopted CBA in their education system to provide learners with important life competencies (Evans et al, 2020). The purpose of adopting CBA in education systems was to reconfigure the patterns of teaching and learning in a way that allowed all students to attain the same performance standards, regardless of the time needed and differentiated supports for each student.…”
Section: History Of Cbamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In his diffusion of innovation theory, Rogers (2003) recognized a continuum of adopters where a percentage of teachers, or “laggards,” delayed adoption, citing “this too shall pass,” as is often the case in educational reform. In a recent literature review, Evans et al (2020) identified barriers and facilitators of CBE implementation and found common barriers were “reluctance of teachers to change instructional methods…and securing buy‐in from teachers” (p. 13). How did New Hampshire teachers’ beliefs serve as barriers or facilitators to operationalizing the 2010 mandate?…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%