Introduction
Some curriculum developers have made a critical mistake by reducing the competency-based approach to a mere change in terminology without changing the system itself. As a result, we may read statements such as “a competency-based curriculum,” while lessons continue to rely on rote instruction and tests remain centered on memorization.
Competencies are not simply a “definitional phrase” placed in the introduction of a textbook; rather, they constitute a system of Constructive Alignment that connects:
- Outcomes
- Instruction
- Assessment
- Competency Is Not a “Topic” but a “Performance”
The key scientific distinction here is:
- Knowledge: the learner knows the rule.
- Competency: the learner uses the rule to accomplish a task.
Therefore, learning outcomes should be formulated in terms of:
The learner can accomplish…
For example, the learner can:
- write a simple formal email,
- summarize an academic paragraph,
- deliver a short presentation while justifying an opinion.
- Constructive Alignment Is the Core of the Competency-Based Approach
Measurable Outcomes
Outcomes must be defined through action, content, and a criterion, including:
- Action (verb): write / summarize / compare
- Content: a specific topic
- Criterion: length / time / accuracy level
Instruction That Achieves the Outcomes
It is not appropriate for instruction to remain focused on explanation while the intended outcome is production.
Assessment That Measures the Same Outcome
If the intended outcome is an oral presentation, it cannot be measured through multiple-choice questions.
- Transforming Content into Tasks (Taskification)
Instead of units such as:
(diptotes / the absolute object)
we design functional units such as:
(description / comparison / requesting / apologizing / negotiation).
In this approach, linguistic rules are transformed into tools:
- structures serve communicative functions,
- vocabulary serves meaning,
- culture serves context and appropriacy.
- Standards-Based Competency Assessment
Assessment here is not an “end point,” but a mechanism for monitoring and improving learning.
Core Standards-Based Tools
- Test Blueprint (Specification Matrix)
- Rubrics for speaking and writing
- Cut Scores for defining level boundaries
- Formative Assessment
Conclusion
The competency-based approach is not about changing labels; it is about building a coherent system:
Outcomes → Tasks → Rubrics → Evidence of Learning
Once this system is established in Arabic programs for non-native speakers, quality standards rise, learning outcomes become clearer, and assessment gains validity and credibility.
