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BC Curriculum: Core Competencies

Understanding the Core Competencies

Core competencies of Thinking, Personal and Social, Communication

from: https://curriculum.gov.bc.ca/competencies

According to the Ministry of Education, there are some essential understandings related to the Core Competencies and how they are connected with the other parts of the BC Curriculum:

  1. “The Core Competencies are sets of intellectual, personal, and social and emotional proficiencies that all students need in order to engage in deep, lifelong learning”
  2. “Along with literacy and numeracy foundations, they are central to British Columbia’s K-12 curriculum and assessment system and directly support students in their growth as educated citizens”
  3. “Students develop Core Competencies when they are engaged in the ‘doing’ – the Curricular Competencies – within a learning area” and, therefore, are an integral part of the curriculum.
  4. Even though the Core Competencies manifest in different ways, they are interconnected and are foundational to all learning.
  5. Core competencies are developed throughout the whole students’ life (before, during, and after school graduation, both inside and outside school settings). For these reasons, schools should not only value and integrate students’ knowledge acquired outside school but also give opportunities to students to learn and/or improve these competencies.

The BC Curriculum has three Core Competencies:

Communication

These are the competencies that students should develop to establish healthier relationships with others. In this sense, students should develop two groups of communication competencies:

    1. Communicating: BC curriculum identifies three facets (skills) that students should develop to active a good communication:
      • Connecting and engaging with others
      • Focusing on intent and purpose
      • Acquiring and presenting information.
    2.  Collaborating: BC curriculum identifies three facets (skills) that students should develop to be able to collaborate with others:
      • Working collectively
      • Supporting group interactions
      • Determining common purposes

Thinking

These are the competencies that students should develop to improve their intellectual development and produce new understandings:

    1. Creative Thinking: BC curriculum identifies three facets (skills) that students should develop:
      1. Creating and innovating
      2. Generating and incubating
      3. Evaluating and developing
    2. Critical Thinking and Reflective Thinking: BC curriculum identifies four facets (skills) that students should develop:
      • Analyzing and critiquing
      • Questioning and investigating
      • Designing and developing
      • Reflecting and assessing

Personal and Social

These are the competencies that students should develop to help them understand their own identity in the world. There are three facets within personal and social:

    1. Personal Awareness and Responsibility
    2. Positive Personal and Cultural Identity
    3. Social Awareness and Responsibility

The BC Curriculum recognizes that Core Competencies are developed inside and outside of school. Consequently, students, teachers, and parents/ guardians have different responsibilities and roles in the process of developing Core Competencies.

To guide students, teachers, and parents/ guardians in understanding how students develop proficiency in the Core Competency, the Ministry of Education has articulated profiles, or levels in the progression of development of each one of the Core Competencies. See an example on the BC government website

How to assess Core Competencies?

Assessment is another big challenge related to the Core Competencies but essential to guarantee that each student is developing them. BC Curriculum suggests that students should self-assess their own Core Competencies, but teachers have an essential role in developing strategies and tools to support students in this task.

Several school districts have published resources to help teachers engage in articulating and helping students self-assess the core competencies:

The Provincial Outreach Program for the Early Years (Popey) has some resources including PPTs with assessment examples  to support teachers implementation in  primary and pre-primary contexts.

Teacher Kerri Hutchinson from Surrey Schools explains and gives many examples of how she has developed and supported her students to self-assess Core Competencies:

Additional resources:

If you are looking for suggestions of how to develop the Core Competencies in your classroom, the UBC Education Library has a Core Competency booklist to support teachers in this work.

References:

Ministry of Education (2022, February 25). BC Curriculum Core Competencies. https://curriculum.gov.bc.ca/competencies


Guest post by Peer Tutor Ariane Faria dos Santos (Ph.D. EDCP), Feb. 2022.

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Filed under Assessment, Core Competencies, Curriculum, Lesson & Unit Planning, Not Subject Specific, Planning

Design Thinking & ADST

Design Thinking is a series of steps that can help people understand the nature of a problem, then consider and test solutions. These steps are part of a cyclical process: the proposed solution may not solve the problem, and then participants will have to go back to earlier steps and work their way through again. Although Design Thinking can be easily embedded in any Applied Design Skills and Technologies (ADST) project, from start to finish, it can be used as a way to think about problem-solving in any subject or classroom.

BC’s newest K-9 curriculum is Applied Design Skills and Technologies. It is interesting to consider the opportunities for teachers to integrate “STEAM” (Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts and Math), Makerspace, computational thinking (including coding) and entrepreneurship in their teaching, and Design Thinking  fits perfectly with inquiry-based projects and hand-on learning. To learn more about the ADST curriculum, please visit the related post on our Scarfe Sandbox Blog.


The Steps

To get students thinking about the entire design process for ADST, from beginning to end, teachers can implement a Design Thinking framework. Design Thinking is a human-centered approach to problem-solving and solution creation. It’s used widely by companies to promote innovation and develop new products. There are 5 standard steps:

  1. Emphasize – try to understand the need
  2. Define – clarify the problem
  3. Ideate – generate lots of ideas
  4. Prototype – build the solution you think might work
  5. Test – see if the prototype solves the problem

For more information, you can check out Stanford University’s Introduction to Design Thinking: Process Guide

Reverse Ideation

Teachers can also encourage students to try Reverse Ideation, which can help to stimulate creative thinking and get students generating ideas from a fresh approach. In Reverse Ideation, students will try to make the problem worse. This approach can take the pressure off of students from having to find the perfect solution and can get ideas flowing (it can also be a fun way to break the ice and get students talking and connecting with each other). Once the worst ideas are out, that can free students to think about possible solutions, using the worst ideas as a starting point. Check out this blog post for an example of what Reverse Ideation can look like in practice.

whiteboard showing multi coloured responses to the question "How to prepare for practicum"

Reverse Ideation in Action! “How to prepare for practicum: worst ideas only”

At a recent Scarfe Foyer session, teacher candidates had the chance to try out Reverse Ideation to help them prepare for their upcoming short practicum.

We set up a white board with our question: “How to Prepare for Practicum? Worst Ideas Only!” We provided white board markers, as well as post-it notes, and asked TC’s to generate ideas. This is a set-up that’s easily replicable in a classroom using whatever materials are on hand, such as chart paper, white/black boards, post-it notes on desks, etc. The unconventional approach to this topic, preparing for practicum, generated a lot of interest and discussion.

Greta, Lindsay and Nashwa host a Scarfe foyer session about reverse ideation and design thinking. Greta writes an idea on the whiteboard.

A Scarfe foyer session highlighting design thinking.


Edited by Peer Mentor Lindsay Cunningham (Ph.D. student, EDCP), October 2023

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Filed under AppliedDesignSkillsTechnologies, Blog Posts, Curriculum, Engineering, Not Subject Specific, STEAM