Voices from the Field

Brittany Terry

4th Grade Math Teacher, SC Competency Fellowship

Elementary educator Brittany Terry used South Carolina’s competency framework to personalize learning and build critical skills. A SC PSCG Competency Fellowship participant, she collaborated across grade levels to embed competencies like “reasoning quantitatively.” Brittany fostered student agency through flexible pathways, encouraging students to communicate needs and demonstrate mastery. Her competency-based approach yielded a remarkable 180% student growth last year. Brittany’s story showcases how the framework empowers teachers to meet students where they are, fill gaps intentionally, and cultivate lifelong problem-solving and self-directed learning skills that go beyond traditional grading.

LEARN MORE ABOUT BRITTANY’S EXPERIENCE

 

Kristen Logan & Melissa Slater

Kristen is a Personalized Learning Coach & Team Lead, and led work at the SC Department of Education on the Personalized Learning Team

Melissa is a Leadership & Instructional Coach and the reDesign Coach/Lead of the Intensive Support program in SC

Kristen Logan and Melissa Slater led coaching and implementation of South Carolina’s competency-based learning initiative. Key lessons: Start with eager teachers, offer personalized entry points to build passion. Take it step-by-step, documenting the process. Let teacher successes inspire leaders rather than top-down mandates. Their stories showcase the power of meeting educators where they are – just as we would for students – and co-creating sustainable change.

UNPACK THEIR LESSONS LEARNED

Apryl Henry, David Consalvi and Kathryn Gibb

Apryl Henry is an English Teacher at River Bluff High School

David Consalvi is the STEAM Coordinator at South Pointe High School

Kathryn Gibb is an English Teacher at River Bluff High School

Lexington School District teachers Apryl Henry and Kathryn Gibb and Rock Hill School District teacher David Consalvi saw South Carolina’s competencies make learning practical and boost student belonging, self-efficacy and growth. Through coaching cycles, they learned to integrate the competencies authentically, connecting skills like communication to real-world applications. While more teacher training is needed, students are embracing the competencies to navigate conflicts, explore identity, set goals and take ownership of personalized projects that unlock engagement. By prioritizing cross-cutting skills over rote knowledge, the competency approach builds a growth mindset for self-directed learning. As one student exemplified in outreach to a local business, the competencies empower students as self-advocates.

ON ENGAGEMENT, DEVELOPMENT AND STUDENT OWNERSHIP

Dr. Lee Green

Director of the Floyd D. Johnson Technology Center

Dr. Green is committed to building his students’ independence and self-management skills – and he understands the practical impact this will have on their marketability to employers and the benefits it will bring to their community. He sees how the competencies help support the execution of technical abilities, particularly in the context of real job prospects. 

As a site leader, he also believes in putting the learner at the center when it comes to both high school level and adult growth, such as teacher capacity-building that is supported with a personalized approach to coaching.

“[…] it puts the child at the center of learning. The children create their own learning by going through this process. Instead of them waiting on their teacher to give them the answers or tell them which direction to go, they have to go out and find it.”

“Those are all the things that, and the rest of the competencies, those are the things that our employers ask that they have when the student comes out. The technical skills, we can teach that all day long, but it’s those soft skills, those things, like those competencies, that’s what the employers are looking for.”

“When reDesign came along with a competency base, what it did was it took those standards, those competencies in the South Carolina Profile and gave it a more relevant everyday language that everybody could get behind. 

“[…] it puts the child at the center of learning. The children create their own learning by going through this process. Instead of them waiting on their teacher to give them the answers or tell them which direction to go, they have to go out and find it.”

“Those are all the things that, and the rest of the competencies, those are the things that our employers ask that they have when the student comes out. The technical skills, we can teach that all day long, but it’s those soft skills, those things, like those competencies, that’s what the employers are looking for.”

“When reDesign came along with a competency base, what it did was it took those standards, those competencies in the South Carolina Profile and gave it a more relevant everyday language that everybody could get behind. 

Jasmine and Tony

High School Juniors at Floyd D. Johnson Technology Center

Tony and Jasmine are just one example of learners within one particular program at Floyd D. Johnson that focuses on preparing students for careers in the Early Childhood Education field. But, they stand out for their clear understanding of the skill sets that are embedded within their learning process, their awareness of the ways competency development has challenged them to become more self-sufficient, their belief in their capabilities, and their motivation to figure out problems more independently.

 “I was really proud of how independent I was because I’m so used to teachers being right by my side holding my hand and telling me everything that I need to do and giving me all of my resources.“

JASMINE

“[…] having to find the questions yourself that you need to ask – it most definitely prepared me for whenever I go into college or even got into the world and I need to research something.

TONY

 “I was really proud of how independent I was because I’m so used to teachers being right by my side holding my hand and telling me everything that I need to do and giving me all of my resources.“

JASMINE

“[…] having to find the questions yourself that you need to ask – it most definitely prepared me for whenever I go into college or even got into the world and I need to research something.

TONY

 “I was really proud of how independent I was because I’m so used to teachers being right by my side holding my hand and telling me everything that I need to do and giving me all of my resources.“

JASMINE

“[…] having to find the questions yourself that you need to ask – it most definitely prepared me for whenever I go into college or even got into the world and I need to research something.

TONY

Competency-Based Learning in Action

Dive into 14 different mini snapshots of implementation in action from around the state – including a template for schools that want to capture their own snapshots of competency-based learning in their community!

Hear educators Apryl Henry & Britt Collins chat about their work  around CBL – and then check out practical examples of “Scaling and Spreading Equitable Practices Through the Profile of a South Carolina Graduate Competencies” from their work at River Bluff High School, including sample rubrics.

Hear River Bluff math teachers Jennifer Gibbons & Andrea Moore explain their view towards “Growth Over Grades” on the PersonalizeSC podcast, including linked examples of how to help students track their progress using the competencies.

Check out the Educator Voices featured in data from our Community of Practice participants!

Competency-Based Learning in Action

Dive into 14 different mini snapshots of implementation in action from around the state – including a template for schools that want to capture their own snapshots of competency-based learning in their community!

Hear educators Apryl Henry & Britt Collins chat about their work  around CBL – and then check out practical examples of “Scaling and Spreading Equitable Practices Through the Profile of a South Carolina Graduate Competencies” from their work at River Bluff High School, including sample rubrics.

Hear River Bluff math teachers Jennifer Gibbons & Andrea Moore explain their view towards “Growth Over Grades” on the PersonalizeSC podcast, including linked examples of how to help students track their progress using the competencies.

Check out the Educator Voices featured in data from our Community of Practice participants!

Competency-Based Learning in Action

Dive into 14 different mini snapshots of implementation in action from around the state – including a template for schools that want to capture their own snapshots of competency-based learning in their community!

Hear educators Apryl Henry & Britt Collins chat about their work  around CBL – and then check out practical examples of “Scaling and Spreading Equitable Practices Through the Profile of a South Carolina Graduate Competencies” from their work at River Bluff High School, including sample rubrics.

Hear River Bluff math teachers Jennifer Gibbons & Andrea Moore explain their view towards “Growth Over Grades” on the PersonalizeSC podcast, including linked examples of how to help students track their progress using the competencies.

Check out the Educator Voices featured in data from our Community of Practice participants!

“My teacher gives me motivation in this class. He tells me I have a bright future and that I will make it in life and I really appreciate [him] for that. He’s a real one.”

STUDENT