3.1. Competence Discourse
Our first subcategory reflects the prominence of competency-based learning in the educational discourse contained in the normative texts. This element is presented as the central axis of the curriculum of the different educational levels and as a definitive impetus for the educational changes that must take place in the classroom. This is expressed in the following fragment: “This Real Decreto is based on the promotion of learning by competences, integrated into the curricular elements in order to promote a renewal in teaching practice and in the teaching and learning process” (CODI-T2).
First of all, it is worth noting the variety of definitions of the term “competence” in texts which, in theory, should be consonant with each other. On the one hand, competence is defined as “a combination of practical skills, knowledge, motivation, ethical values, attitudes, emotions, and other social and behavioural components that are mobilised together to achieve effective action” (CODI-T2). Moreover, it is stated that competences “are conceptualised as ‘know-how’ that applies to a variety of academic, social and professional contexts” (CODI-T2). Particular emphasis is also placed on the importance of a proper understanding of the typology of knowledge present in competences.
Competence knowledge integrates a conceptual knowledge base: concepts, principles, theories, data and facts (declarative knowledge-knowing how to say); knowledge related to skills, referring to both observable physical action and mental action (procedural knowledge-knowing how to do); and a third component that has a strong social and cultural influence, and which involves a set of attitudes and values (knowing how to be).
(CODI-T3)
Secondly, several benefits are associated with the interrelationships of the different components that characterise competence learning. One of these is the fact that this type of learning “favours the learning processes themselves and the motivation to learn” (CODI-T3). In this way, a direct and unquestionable correlation is established between work based on competences and the supposed stimulation of students. Another of the great virtues of competency-based learning is expressed in Orden ECD/65/2015, de 21 de enero, as “an integral training of people”, which enables them to “reorganise their thinking and acquire new knowledge, improve their actions and discover new forms of action and new skills that enable them to perform tasks efficiently, favouring lifelong learning” (CODI-T3). From this perspective, competency-based learning is presented as a definitive and revolutionary approach to renew and improve the quality of any educational process.
As a complement to this apologetic approach, the same text indicates some of the keys to developing an effective process of competency-based learning at school.
Since competency-based learning is characterised by its transversality, its dynamism and its comprehensive nature, the competency-based teaching-learning process must be approached from all areas of knowledge and by the various entities that make up the educational community, in both formal and non-formal and informal spheres. Its dynamism is reflected in the fact that competences are not acquired at a given moment and remain unalterable, but involve a process of development through which individuals gradually acquire higher levels of performance in the use of these competences.
(CODI-T3)
Focusing now on the process of integrating the competency-based learning model into the official Spanish curriculum, we can point out the international references identified in the normative texts. On the one hand, it was stated that UNESCO was the organisation that established the precursor principles for the application of competency-based teaching “by identifying the basic pillars of lifelong learning for the 21st century, consisting of ‘learning to know’, ‘learning to do’, ‘learning to be’ and ‘learning to live together’” (CODI-T3). On the other hand, in line with what was noted in the theoretical framework, the direct reference for Spain is the European Union. According to the text, the guidelines of this institution raise the relevance of competences by defending the acquisition of these “as an indispensable condition for individuals to achieve full personal, social and professional development that meets the demands of a globalised world and makes economic development possible, linked to knowledge” (CODI-T3).
In fact, Spanish legislation adopts the concept of key competences as defined by the European Union: “those that all people need for their personal fulfilment and development, as well as for active citizenship, social inclusion and employment” (CODI-T2), adding, at another point, that these are “essential for the well-being of European societies, economic growth and innovation” (CODI-T2). The precedent, in the Spanish case, would be the Ley Orgánica de Educación (LOE) (2006), which included the term “basic competences” for the first time. In this sense, the LOMCE and the different regulatory texts that developed it claimed to go “further” in terms of the implementation of the curriculum of competences by including the term “competences” within the definition of the “basic curriculum” (CODI-T3).
Specifically, the two main sources with which the Orden ECD/65/2015 de 21 de enero claimed to align itself are “the results of educational research” and “the European trends set out in Recommendation 2006/962/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 18 December 2006 on key competences for lifelong learning” (CODI-T3). On this basis, Article 2 of the Orden established that the key competences in the Spanish education system are the following: (a) linguistic communication, (b) mathematical competence and basic competences in science and technology, (c) digital competence, (d) learning to learn, (e) social and civic competences, (f) a sense of initiative and entrepreneurship, and (g) cultural awareness and expressions (CODI-T3). Article 4 (“Key competences and objectives of the stages”) contains certain requirements for the integration of competences in the different educational stages. Among them, due to the originality it represents with respect to the ideas already discussed, the following should be highlighted: “the design of integrated learning activities that enable progress to be made towards the learning outcomes of more than one competence at the same time” (CODI-T3).
At this point, it is necessary to know more specifically what the guidelines are for the integration of key competences in all curricular areas or subjects, which can be found in Article 5 of the same Orden we have just mentioned. These guidelines, which are summarised in the following table, constitute certain basic requirements to be taken into account by teachers when drawing up or redefining teaching programmes in terms of key competences (see
Table 4).
Considering all these requirements, this is the right moment to find out how the competency approach is included in the subject of Geography and History, according to the regulatory discourses. In this sense, one of the objectives of the subject contemplated in the Real Decreto 1105/2014, de 26 de diciembre can be used as an introduction to this new topic: “to continue acquiring the competences necessary to understand the reality of the world in which they live, past and present collective experiences, their orientation in the future, as well as the space in which life in society develops” (CODI-T2).
In the Orden de 14 de julio de 2016, which, among other aspects, develops the curriculum of secondary education in the region of Andalusia, we found a characterisation of the subject which specified that our subject will train students in certain “skills” for, on the one hand, “the understanding of the complexity of current societies” and, on the other, “the analysis and implementation of the strategies required to exercise responsible, participatory citizenship, aware of their identity, rights and obligations, in a plural and globalised environment” (CODI-T5). This last idea is mentioned again in the supposed transversal “contributions” of Geography and History to the overall ESO curriculum, referring to “the development of personal competences and social skills for the exercise of participation through the assessment of the various channels of citizen action and empowerment” (CODI-T5). At first glance, in the context of our subject, the concept of competence acquires a new significance that moves away from what has been said about key competences to focus on knowledge that is fundamentally attitudinal and related to the development of civic education.
In order to understand the supposed contribution of the subject of Geography and History to the development of competences, we must move forward in examining the same Orden. Below (see
Table 5), we list some excerpts that allowed us to explore this issue in greater depth.
All these discursive propositions have an impact on the way in which the “Objectives” (the title of the section) or “competences” (the term by which the list of objectives is finally referred to) are linked to how the subject of Geography and History is formulated. In this respect, it is interesting to note the use of the latter word as a synonym for “specific competences” of the subject, which may cause some confusion for teachers when interpreting the official curriculum. In fact, it would seem that the development of these “competences” would imply the implementation of several competences at the same time. As an example of this last idea, one of the 16 objectives or capacities established in the Andalusian curriculum is reproduced below: “To know and analyse the ways in which human society transforms the environment, and how the territory influences the organisation and identity of this society, reflecting on the dangers that human intervention generates in the environment, with special emphasis on the case of Andalusia” (CODI-T5).
3.2. Disciplinary Reality
In the area of Social Sciences, in particular, the contents are almost strictly conceptual, to the extent that there is a certain obsession with facts, dates, characters, data, features or geographical places on the map. Bearing in mind the importance we give to memorised exams, both in History and Geography, it is clear that these contents are understood as closed, almost timeless and, of course, classified in disciplinary compartments. Proof of this is that, from time to time, the Department asks us to include a series of notes and materials dating back fifty years.
(DIRE-T12)
Our second subcategory represents the predominance of disciplinary contents in school practice as opposed to a competency-based approach to teaching and learning. Paradoxically, this situation arises in the very regulatory texts responsible for regulating the official curriculum, through the existence of certain contradictions. On the one hand, it is stated, as we saw a moment ago, that competences must be integrated into all curricular elements; on the other, we find that the way of stating certain elements may be indicative of a purely conceptual dimension rather than a competence dimension. In other words, the suspension of the discourse on competences, in some parts of the normative texts, implies the appearance of a discourse that is not very different from the traditional disciplinary organisation of curricular content.
As an example of this, we can reproduce some of the terms used in the Orden de 1 de julio de 2016 to characterise the most appropriate way of working on the elements considered to be “relevant” in the subject of Geography and History: “range of scientific references”, “study”, “conceptualising society”, “global vision”, “knowledge of historical facts”, “understanding the position and relevance of Andalusia in the rest of Spain”, “knowing and handling the vocabulary, and research and analysis techniques specific to the social sciences”, “causes of war and conflict”, “relevant characteristics of the natural environment both in Andalusia and the rest of the world”, “gathering information”, and so on (DIRE-T5).
The indications about the possible competences of the “objectives” of Geography and History are few and diffuse. In fact, among the consequences of working in this subject, the text cited does not highlight the development of any specific key competences but highlights the “appreciation” of the following aspects: “the connections between past and present and human beings and nature; the importance of the notions of change and continuity in social structure and dynamics and the value of comparative methodology together with diachronic and synchronic analysis” (DIRE-T5). The apparent abandonment of the competency discourse can also be verified by looking at the main actions that are mentioned in the objectives of our subject (not including those that make up subordinate clauses), which are grouped in
Table 6 below according to their frequency of appearance.
The following excerpt, focused on the task of knowing, is a good example of the type of actions that articulate the objectives, which do not seem to have undergone any kind of transformation under the competence approach that is supposed to be present in all curriculum subjects: “Knowledge of society, its organisation and functioning over time is essential in order to understand today’s world. Knowing the space where societies develop, the natural resources and the use that has been made of them, provides us with data about the past (…)” (DIRE-T2). Nor in the following words do we discover any clue as to the place that competences should occupy in these changes that the secondary stage represents with respect to primary education: “pupils will delve, in a more systematic, organised and profound way than in Primary Education, into the foundations of the identity and functioning mechanisms of human society, and the forms of relationship between them and with the environment, as well as the spatial dimension in which these arise and develop” (DIRE-T5).
Even when speaking of “transversal elements”, no reference to competences is made, as such, but instead to what appear to be themes to be included in the conventional content blocks. Some examples are: “the situation of women throughout history and the struggle for the recognition of their rights…; the identity, projection and space of Andalusian culture in the rest of Spain and the world…; the economic growth and development of Andalusia in history and the present” (DIRE-T5). In general, in the regulatory texts, there is a predominant use of terms such as “disciplines” and a recognition of the usefulness of both Geography and History as well as all those disciplines linked to the area of Social Sciences, “for a better understanding of social reality” (DIRE-T2).
Despite the complexity and interdisciplinarity advocated in the normative texts, the organisation of curricular content is, at least in appearance, rather conventional: “Geography is organised, in the first cycle, in the blocks ‘The physical environment’ and ‘Human space’, and in the fourth year it focuses on globalisation. History studies societies over time, following a chronological criterion throughout the two cycles of ESO” (DIRE-T2).
Regarding the discourses produced by the school’s Department of Social Sciences, the first thing to note is that the question of competency-based learning appears, as in the normative texts, to be diluted and/or directly displaced. This can be seen in the discourse represented in the Geography and History subject guide for students in their first year of secondary education, where expressions such as “ask ourselves questions and draw conclusions”, “write detailed answers and essays”, “give a voice to historical figures”, “broaden both our knowledge of our environment and our critical thinking”, and so on (DIRE-T9) are used. One of the fragments where the survival of a habitual way of approaching teaching and learning processes can be best appreciated is the following one:
Our History of Art contents will run parallel to the History topics, and will also be worked on in relation to the general characteristics of each artistic style, from some well-known examples, as well as from the specific vocabulary that allows us to formally describe an artistic work.
(DIRE-T9)
Leaving aside the didactic criteria of the Department, the particular way of conceiving and working on competences at the School (in this case, in relation to the assessment instruments used) was interpreted from the teaching perspective in a critical way:
I remember how stunned I was last year when I asked about the assessment of competences in our subjects. One of my senior colleagues said to me—completely convinced—: “Sure, here they are next to each question”, pointing out to me the acronyms of the key competences, which he put next to questions that were 100% conceptual, the same ones he had been asking for thirty years. This is practically all the questions in our exams, with the exception of those on historical maps or some Geography graphs.
(DIRE-T12)
The following diary note, again a critical one, provides further insight into the Department’s priorities in teaching plans:
When I arrived at the school, I was struck by the fact that in 3rd Secondary level there were also History subjects. My Department argues that it is important that pupils should not spend a year without seeing historical content, so the Middle Ages are left for 2nd and the Modern Age for 3rd. The truth is that I think this is a good approach, although it follows the same chronological criteria as always and the weight of Geography is somewhat reduced in order to go deeper into data and references which, in my opinion, completely escape the purpose of the subject at these levels.
(DIRE-T12)
To conclude this inside look at what was happening in our case study, the best way to confirm what type of content was being worked on in the subject of Geography and History is through the pupils’ answers to the first question in the interview, specifically the second part: “Do you consider that the content of Social Sciences (History, Geography, Art, Music…) requires a lot of effort? What do you find most difficult?”. The next graph shows which aspects are the most difficult for students. The number of times each of these aspects was mentioned was taken into account, as well as the total number of aspects mentioned, in order to calculate the respective percentages. In
Figure 1, the aspects are ordered from the highest to the lowest number of mentions received.
Table 7 provides a representative selection of the responses from which the data shown in the graph above were obtained.
As we can see, the tasks that demand the most effort and time on the part of pupils have nothing to do with competences. Almost half of the pupils point to the memorised study of maps as the main challenge they face in the subject of Geography and History. This practice, in our case study, did not involve the use of any kind of digital technology, as the only resource needed to tackle it were paper maps of Spain and the world, both physical and political. As far as the History content is concerned, the development of the topics, paradoxical as it may seem, did not represent a more important challenge than learning the abundant “names” and “dates” asked about in the written exams.