Colleague, explore the August edition of Carnegie's newsletter and learn how competency-based learning is transforming high schools across the nation, fostering deeper community connections and offering students more opportunities for success.
View in browser
CAR logo_INTER_Black@4x (1) (2)
Aug_2024 _ Newsletter-CF-3

Dear Friends and Colleagues, 

 

If you look closely at the landscape of secondary schooling across the nation, you will see a sea change underway. There are hundreds of high schools across the country actively moving away from our 120-year-old, pre-industrial educational model, where time is a proxy for learning and credit accumulation rules the day. Instead, educators and policymakers are embracing modern, competency-based models of schooling, where the actual acquisition of academic skills, durable skills and credentials is becoming the new currency of the educational economy.  

 

You can find evidence of these shifts in red states and blue ones, in rural regions and the suburbs, and in cities across the country. Rhode Island, Indiana, Utah, Nevada, New Hampshire and North Carolina are just a few of the states on this essential journey. A through line in this work are the educators and citizen leaders, forging strong partnerships between schools and their communities. Teachers and students are working with local organizations to identify, assess and address real community challenges. There is rapid expansion of partnerships designed to ensure all high school students can take college-level coursework, making high school learning richer, and college more accessible and affordable. And there is explosive growth in 21st-century career and technical programs that bridge school and career, help young people discover their passions, earn valuable credentials, and develop essential skills. 

 

Paolo DeMaria, President and CEO of the National Association of State Boards of Education (NASBE) collaborates with State Boards across the nation to turbocharge high school transformation. In our newly published Q&A with Paolo, he emphasizes the growing demand from state leaders to make what happens in high school more engaging, meaningful and career aligned. Speaking with Paolo reminds us that by centering community, amplifying citizen voices, and enlisting a broad set of actors - particularly state leaders - we can “help all kids be their absolute best and create the conditions for them to reach their full potential”.  

 

We celebrate NASBE, as they join forces with other pathfinders, to ensure our high schools meet the moment we are in.   

 

In partnership,

TK_Newsletter_Profile

Timothy Knowles

President, Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching

    CFN_600x400_Feb24_v4
    The74_260x160

    FEATURED MEDIA

    Reinventing Report Cards: Reading, Writing, Collaboration and Other Work Skills
    (The74)

    Read more →

      DeMariaNASBE_260x160

      FEATURED STORY
      Navigating Educational Transformation: A Q&A with State Board Leader Paolo DeMaria
      Read more →

        CFN_600x400_Feb24_v4 (2)
        • The State of Career and Technical Education, in Charts (Education Week)

        • Do Skills Taught in K-12 Schools Really Lead to Upward Mobility? $3 Million in Grant Money Aims to Find Out (LA School Report)
        • Students Speak Out: How to Make High Schools Places Where They Want to Learn (The74)
        • A Potential Path Forward for Pell Grant Expansion (KnowledgeWorks)
        • New Diploma Requirements Could Have an Outsize Impact on College-Going Students (Chalkbeat Indiana)

        Connect Your Community to Our Work.
        Share this newsletter and follow Carnegie on social

        Facebook
        LinkedIn
        X
        CF_Tree - color

        Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching
        51 Vista Lane, Stanford, CA 94305

        Unsubscribe