Implementing your first Competency-based Education (CBE) program could be daunting. This article, the second in this series, describes how this effort touches every part of an institution, why, and key considerations.
If you haven't read our first article in the series, which introduces CBE and provides links to useful resources, we suggest you start here.
As covered in that article, Competency-based Education represents a completely different way of instructing and measuring students. It removes many of the restrictions placed on students to make education more accessible and inclusive. However, those restrictions have been baked into the way the schools run and manage their institutions. These changes are as follows:
The fundamental changes previously described have a domino effect on each of the parts of the institution that touch the student. This means that the following will be done differently in a CBE program.
Each of these changes affect the systems that institutions use to interact with students, manage the learning process, and manage the institution.
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Unfortunately, the systems on the market today (and most likely deployed at your institution) have the restrictions that CBE is eliminating baked into them. Terms, courses, tests, and grades are rigid in these systems and make the more flexible model of CBE very difficult to deploy.
An excellent Educause article goes into more detail with respect to these challenges at institutions looking to adopt CBE. It can be read here.
Now that we understand the complexity and number of stakeholders / moving parts, how do you get started? We recommend a two-stage approach.
Because this initiative represents a dramatic shift in how an institution operates, the best approach is to identify a degree program to begin with. This will allow you to focus on one type of student, and one area of your curriculum. Not only will it dramatically reduce your work, but it will allow you to be more agile as you learn what works and doesn't work for your institution and culture.
A good example of an institution that took this approach is the University of Louisville, where they began with their Healthcare Leadership track. The program overview shows the unique structure of the offering in the courses tab, with Assessment and Exit courses listed.
We recommend that you choose a program with the following attributes:
Once you've identified the program, the next step is to determine how to implement your CBE program. As mentioned above, this involved many different stakeholders, impacting many processes and systems. Each part of the organization must be in alignment in order for this to work.
A technique that accomplishes this called Design Thinking. This is a methodology with the goal of ensuring the premises for which an organization operates (and the systems it utilizes) are a good fit spanning all stakeholders along the way.
Our methodology follows common practices and includes the following steps (applied to the student's perspective for the CBE degree program chosen). The key to success are the following:
This ensures a holistic approach to the solution that breaks down silos, improves collaboration and buy-in, and controls scope.