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Identifying and Using Clusters of Competencies
As you review the student competencies
in the National Standards, look for commonalities,
similar skills that cluster together. We identified
several and gave them the following names: Learning
about Self, Learn
More about the Jobs that Interest Me, Learning
Employability Skills, and Learning
How to Become Informed. Look for
other clusters and groupings.
To
see how these clusters can help you, let's take
a look at another cluster we identified: "Learning
and Using Effective Decision-Making Skills." First,
read over these competencies:
- Academic:
- Use problem-solving
and decision-making skills to assess progress toward
educational goals.
- Learn
and apply critical thinking skills.
- Career:
- Learn
to make decisions.
- Understand
the importance of planning.
- Select
course work that is related to career interests.
- Apply
decision-making skills to career planning, course selection,
and career transitions
- Personal/Social
- Use
a decision-making and problem-solving model
- Understand
consequences of decisions and choices
- Identify
alternative solutions to a problem
- Identify
long- and short-term goals
- Develop
an action plan to set and achieve realistic goals
- Apply
effective problem-solving and decision-making skills
to make safe and healthy choices
Notice that focusing on
decision-making skills gives you several powerful
advantages. You will:
- Cover numerous student competencies, giving
you the opportunity to do more with less.
- Consider
how these competencies relate to each other -- how
you and your team can organize learning and work together
most effectively.
- Have
a coherent theme that everyone can understand and
support -- teachers, administrators, parents, and students.
As an added bonus, in The Career Key you have a decision-making
model that is simple, practical, and strongly
supported by research. And, Decision-Making is
one of the 17 Foundation
Skills described at the website.
- Relate
your program to the school's academic goals and to
teachers' learning objectives – obviously important
in today's schools. In addition, with your initial
support, teachers can learn how to teach the ACIP
decision-making model and help students use it
in making important academic, career, and personal
decisions.
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