Thursday, July 16, 2026

Holistic Outcomes-Based Personalized Education System

 The HOPES Framework is a proposed K–12 educational model designed to replace the Common Core by shifting focus from standardized testing to individualized growth. Drawing from successful Nordic educational mechanisms in Sweden and Finland, the system utilizes a living learning plan co-authored by students, teachers, and guardians to track long-term progress. The curriculum is built upon four pillars, emphasizing transversal competencies, multidisciplinary phenomenon-based learning, and a mandatory handicraft strand to foster physical-world judgment. A central goal of the framework is AI-readiness, prioritizing human-centric skills such as ethical reasoning, oral articulation, and collaborative problem-solving that technology cannot easily replicate. By elevating teacher autonomy and secular ethics instruction, the model aims to produce resilient, self-directed learners capable of navigating a rapidly changing digital economy. This holistic approach redefines academic success as the mastery of process and agency rather than the simple memorization of content.

The HOPES Framework: Personalized Education Plans for the AI Era SLIDE DECK





















HOPES

Holistic Outcomes-Based Personalized Education System

A K–12 Curriculum Framework for the AI Era

Synthesizing the Swedish IUP, the Finnish HOPS, and Finland's Seven Transversal Competencies

A Curriculum Framework Proposal

Prepared by Sean Taylor, M.Ed. — Reading Boot Camp / Reading Sage


 

Contents

I. Executive Summary

II. The Evidence Base: What the Nordic Record Actually Shows

III. Design Principles

IV. Architecture: The Four Pillars

V. Pillar One — The HOPES-Plan (Personalized Learning Plan)

VI. Pillar Two — The Seven Transversal Competencies (Adapted)

VII. Pillar Three — Phenomenon-Based Learning & the Handicraft Strand

VIII. Pillar Four — Morals & Ethics Education

IX. Assessment Model

X. AI-Readiness by Design

XI. The Teacher Model

XII. HOPES vs. Common Core: A Structural Comparison

XIII. Implementation Roadmap

XIV. Closing Vision


 

I. Executive Summary

HOPES — the Holistic Outcomes-Based Personalized Education System — is a K–12 curriculum framework proposed as a replacement for the Common Core State Standards model. Where Common Core standardizes content coverage and measures success primarily through high-stakes testing, HOPES standardizes a process: every student, in partnership with a teacher and a guardian, builds and revises a living personal learning plan across their entire school career, developing named competencies through real, cross-disciplinary work rather than isolated subject drills.

The framework draws its architecture from three proven Nordic mechanisms — Sweden's Individuell utvecklingsplan (IUP), Finland's Henkilökohtainen oppimissuunnitelma (HOPS), and Finland's seven transversal competencies — and adds two strands often underweighted in American reform conversations: hands-on handicraft/maker education (käsityö) as a cognitive and vocational anchor, and explicit, secular morals and ethics education as a standalone strand rather than an incidental byproduct of discipline policy.

HOPES is built for the moment we're actually in. AI can already produce fluent text, solve standardized problems, and simulate expertise — which means a curriculum optimized for content transmission and standardized recall is optimizing for the wrong target. HOPES instead optimizes for what AI cannot substitute: oracy, embodied craft skill, ethical judgment, collaborative problem-framing, and the ability to direct one's own learning over a lifetime.

II. The Evidence Base: What the Nordic Record Actually Shows

It is tempting to build a pitch on “Finland is #1,” but the honest record is more interesting, and more useful, than the slogan. Finland topped or near-topped every PISA cycle from 2000 through the early 2010s, and remains solidly above the OECD average in reading, mathematics, and science today — but its scores have declined over the past decade, and Estonia has overtaken it as Europe's current PISA leader. A framework built on Finland's example should borrow the mechanism, not the myth.

The wellbeing picture is similarly nuanced and, frankly, more instructive. On PISA's own wellbeing indices, Finnish students rank among the OECD's highest in stress resistance and empathy — but are not particularly curious by the same measurement, and show one of the weakest relationships between sense-of-belonging and achievement. In other words: Finland does not produce uniformly “happier” students across every dimension — it produces students who are notably resilient and low-stress, which is a narrower and more credible claim than “happiest in the world.”

Finland has also topped the World Happiness Report for years — but that measures adult national life satisfaction, not a classroom outcome, and shouldn't be cited as if it were a PISA subscore. HOPES treats the Nordic evidence as a case for a mechanism — personalized planning, transversal competencies, reduced high-stakes testing, hands-on craft, explicit ethics instruction — not as a promise of guaranteed rank. The design bet is that this mechanism protects wellbeing and equity durably, even when raw score rankings fluctuate.

III. Design Principles

      Process over content coverage — the plan is the curriculum's spine, not a pacing guide.

      Oracy before literacy — spoken articulation of thinking precedes and scaffolds written mastery.

      Three-way ownership — student, teacher, and guardian co-author and co-review the plan; no party works from it alone.

      Hands make meaning — embodied, multi-material craft work is core cognitive infrastructure, not an elective.

      Ethics is a subject, not a slogan — explicit instructional time for moral reasoning, independent of religious affiliation.

      Assessment documents growth, not just position — portfolios and competency evidence sit alongside, and often ahead of, standardized measures.

      Teachers are trusted professionals — the system is built around teacher judgment and reduced external inspection, following the Finnish trust model.

      AI-literate, not AI-dependent — the curriculum teaches when and how to use AI tools critically, and deliberately protects the skills AI erodes if unpracticed.


 

IV. Architecture: The Four Pillars

HOPES rests on four interlocking pillars. None functions as a standalone “program” — the Plan (Pillar One) is the record and driver of progress across the other three; the transversal competencies (Pillar Two) are the shared vocabulary every subject and module reports against; phenomenon-based modules and handicraft (Pillar Three) are where competencies are practiced on real, hands-on problems; and ethics (Pillar Four) is where judgment about how to use all of it gets taught directly rather than assumed.

Pillar

Mechanism

Function

Pillar One

The HOPES-Plan

A living, three-way personal learning plan reviewed on a fixed cadence — synthesis of Swedish IUP + Finnish HOPS

Pillar Two

Seven Transversal Competencies

Cross-cutting skill targets applied inside every subject and every module

Pillar Three

Phenomenon-Based Modules + Handicraft

Multidisciplinary, real-world units; hands-on textile/technical craft as a required strand

Pillar Four

Morals & Ethics Education

Explicit, secular moral-reasoning instruction, standalone from religious education

V. Pillar One — The HOPES-Plan (Personalized Learning Plan)

The HOPES-Plan merges the Swedish IUP's rhythm of regular development talks (utvecklingssamtal) with the Finnish HOPS's broader, whole-career scope and its explicit inclusion of social-emotional and learning-skills goals alongside academic ones. Every student has one continuous plan from kindergarten entry through grade 12, reviewed on a fixed cadence rather than reconstructed from scratch each year.

Structure

      Reviewed three times per academic year (fall, winter, spring) via a short three-way conference — student, teacher, guardian.

      Each review sets 2–3 student-authored goals in the student's own words, lightly scaffolded by the teacher.

      Each review logs teacher observations and a concrete support plan — not just a status label.

      At upper-secondary level, the plan shifts from teacher-guided to student-authored, functioning as a personal course/credit map, mirroring the shift already present in Finland's non-graded lukio system.

      At the elementary level in particular, the plan explicitly separates academic, learning-skills, and social-emotional goals so that none crowds out the others.

A full example HOPES-Plan template, modeled on this structure, is available as a companion document.


 

VI. Pillar Two — The Seven Transversal Competencies (Adapted)

HOPES adopts Finland's seven transversal competency areas largely intact, with one deliberate update: the original “Information and Communication Technology” competence is reframed as Digital & AI Literacy, reflecting the reality that today's students need explicit instruction in working alongside — and critically evaluating — generative AI, not just general computer literacy.

Competency

What it means in practice

Thinking & Learning to Learn

Metacognition, self-directed inquiry, transfer across domains

Cultural Competence, Interaction & Self-Expression

Collaboration across difference; spoken and creative articulation of ideas

Self-Care & Managing Daily Life

Executive function, personal responsibility, practical life skills

Multiliteracy

Reading across text, image, data, and media formats critically

Digital & AI Literacy

Adapted from Finland's ICT competence — expanded to include critical, ethical use of AI tools and detection of AI-generated content

Working Life Skills & Entrepreneurship

Initiative, project ownership, applied problem-solving

Participation & Sustainable Future

Civic engagement, environmental and social responsibility

Every phenomenon-based module (Pillar Three) is tagged against two or more of these seven competencies, and every HOPES-Plan review checks progress against them directly — so the competencies function as the shared reporting language between the Plan and the classroom, not as a poster on the wall.

VII. Pillar Three — Phenomenon-Based Learning & the Handicraft Strand

Phenomenon-based modules

Each student completes at least one multidisciplinary phenomenon module per year — more at older grades — organized around a real-world theme (water, migration, the local watershed, artificial intelligence itself) rather than a single subject. Subject teachers collaborate to design each module so that math, language arts, science, and social studies are all genuinely present inside one coherent inquiry, not just cross-referenced.

Handicraft (käsityö) as a required strand, not an elective

HOPES elevates hands-on craft to a required strand running alongside academic subjects through at least grade 9, following Finland's model of common crafts education. Two braided strands run in parallel:

      Textile craft — fiber, fabric, and soft-material construction and design

      Technical craft — wood, metal, electronics, and increasingly computer-aided design and fabrication

Students choose working methods appropriate to their own project rather than being assigned identical outputs, and every project follows a design → make → evaluate cycle: a documented plan, a physical build, and a reflective evaluation against the original design intent. That documentation — not a single graded object — is the unit of assessment, which keeps the strand honest to process over product.

The pedagogical case for keeping this mandatory rather than optional is direct: embodied, multi-material problem-solving builds exactly the kind of tacit, physical-world judgment that generative AI cannot replicate or shortcut, which makes it more valuable in an AI-saturated economy, not less.


 

VIII. Pillar Four — Morals & Ethics Education

HOPES includes a standalone, secular ethics strand modeled on Finland's elämänkatsomustieto (“life-stance” or secular ethics) subject, which has run in Finnish comprehensive schools since 1985 and is grounded in values such as democracy, human rights, and pluralism rather than any single religious tradition. In HOPES, this becomes a required strand for every student — not an opt-out alternative to religious instruction — so that moral reasoning is taught explicitly to the whole cohort rather than assumed to emerge from discipline policy or incidental classroom culture.

Core threads across grade bands

      Early grades: fairness, empathy, honesty, and community through story and discussion, not doctrine.

      Middle grades: structured ethical reasoning frameworks, perspective-taking, and case-based moral dilemmas.

      Upper grades: applied ethics — civic ethics, media and information ethics, and explicitly, AI ethics — questions of authorship, bias, consent, and truth in an AI-mediated information environment.

This strand is deliberately kept separate from, and not a substitute for, character-compliance programs built around behavior management. Its aim is reasoning capacity — the ability to work through a genuine moral dilemma with others — which is also, not incidentally, one of the harder capacities for AI tools to simulate credibly or safely delegate to.

IX. Assessment Model

HOPES does not eliminate standardized measurement — it demotes it from sole arbiter to one diagnostic input among several. This follows directly from a documented critique of assessment-driven education: when standardized outcomes and accountability pressure dominate, students and teachers stop being asked to inquire and evolve their own understanding, and start adapting to the measurement itself. HOPES is designed to prevent that inversion structurally, not just rhetorically.

Instrument

Frequency

Purpose

Portfolio evidence

Ongoing

Craft process documentation, writing samples, project artifacts collected across the year

Competency checkpoints

3x/year, tied to HOPES-Plan reviews

Teacher-rated progress against the seven transversal competencies

Phenomenon module evaluation

End of each module

Rubric-based assessment of the multidisciplinary module, not a single-subject test

Targeted standardized measures

Periodic, low-stakes

Used diagnostically to catch gaps early — never used as the sole graduation or promotion gate


 

X. AI-Readiness by Design

HOPES treats AI not as a bolt-on “tech skills” unit but as a force that changes what's worth teaching at all. Three structural responses run through the whole framework:

1. Double down on what AI can't do

Oracy, embodied craft, live ethical reasoning, and collaborative project ownership are all difficult to fake, automate, or outsource convincingly. HOPES weights instructional time toward these deliberately, rather than toward content transmission that a model can now do instantly.

2. Teach AI as an object of study, not just a tool

Digital & AI Literacy (Pillar Two) and the AI ethics thread (Pillar Four) both treat AI systems as something students learn to interrogate — bias, provenance, hallucination, authorship — alongside learning to use them productively.

3. Protect the struggle that builds capability

Portfolio and process-based assessment (Pillar Three, Pillar Nine) makes the student's own thinking visible at intermediate stages, which both resists AI-assisted shortcutting and gives teachers a diagnostic window that a final polished product doesn't.

XI. The Teacher Model

None of the above works without a corresponding shift in how teachers are trained, trusted, and evaluated — the piece most American reform efforts skip. HOPES follows Finland's model directly:

      Master's-level preparation as the entry credential, with genuine subject-matter depth, not just pedagogy coursework.

      High professional autonomy in module design and pacing — no scripted curriculum handed down for daily delivery.

      Collaborative planning time built into the school day for cross-subject phenomenon-module design.

      Reduced external inspection regimes, replaced by peer review and the portfolio evidence generated by Pillar Three and Pillar Nine.

      Teacher voice in HOPES-Plan review protected as professional judgment, not overridden by a single standardized score.


 

XII. HOPES vs. Common Core: A Structural Comparison

Dimension

Common Core (typical implementation)

HOPES

Primary unit of planning

Grade-level pacing guide

Individual student's HOPES-Plan, revised 3x/year

Primary success measure

Standardized test score

Competency evidence + portfolio + periodic diagnostic testing

Subject structure

Discrete, siloed subjects

Discrete subjects + required multidisciplinary phenomenon modules

Hands-on craft

Elective / underfunded

Required strand through grade 9 (textile + technical)

Ethics instruction

Implicit / discipline-policy driven

Standalone, explicit, secular ethics strand

AI posture

Largely unaddressed or banned outright

Explicit AI literacy + ethics + protected non-automatable skills

Teacher role

Deliver standardized content with fidelity

Design modules, exercise judgment, co-author student plans

Testing stakes

High-stakes, gatekeeping

Low-stakes, diagnostic

XIII. Implementation Roadmap

Phase

Focus

Key milestones

Year 1

Pilot

2–3 volunteer schools; train teachers on HOPES-Plan protocol and phenomenon-module design; launch handicraft strand at one grade band

Year 2

Expand & tune

Add ethics strand; expand handicraft to full K–9 range; first full cycle of portfolio-based assessment

Year 3

District rollout

Scale HOPES-Plan protocol district-wide; formal teacher-autonomy and reduced-inspection policy adopted

Year 4+

Steady state

Full four-pillar operation; longitudinal tracking of competency growth and wellbeing indicators, not just test scores

XIV. Closing Vision

HOPES is not a bet that copying Finland guarantees a #1 ranking — the evidence doesn't support that promise, and a serious framework shouldn't make it. It's a bet that the underlying mechanism — a genuinely personalized plan, competencies practiced across real work, hands-on craft as core cognition, explicit ethical reasoning, and teachers trusted as professionals — produces students who are resilient, capable, and equipped to direct their own learning long after they leave a system that can no longer promise them a stable, unautomatable body of content to memorize.

That is the actual argument for replacing Common Core: not a higher score, but a better-aimed target.

The HOPES framework (Holistic Outcomes-Based Personalized Education System) is structured around four interlocking pillars designed to move away from standardized content coverage toward a process-driven, personalized educational model. Each pillar serves a distinct function but relies on the others to create a cohesive learning experience.

1. Pillar One: The HOPES-Plan (Personalized Learning Plan)

The HOPES-Plan serves as the "spine" of the curriculum. It is a living, three-way document co-authored and reviewed by the student, teacher, and guardian.

  • Structure: It is reviewed three times per academic year (fall, winter, spring) through short conferences.
  • Function: Unlike a traditional report card, it tracks a student's individual growth trajectory, setting 2–3 self-authored goals in academic, learning-skills, and social-emotional domains.
  • Evolution: As students move into upper-secondary levels, they take more ownership, and the plan evolves into a personal course and credit map.

2. Pillar Two: The Seven Transversal Competencies

These are cross-cutting skill targets integrated into every subject and module, providing a shared reporting language for the student’s progress. The seven competencies include:

  • Thinking & Learning to Learn: Metacognition and self-directed inquiry.
  • Cultural Competence, Interaction & Self-Expression: Collaboration and creative articulation.
  • Self-Care & Managing Daily Life: Executive function and practical life skills.
  • Multiliteracy: Critical reading across various media formats.
  • Digital & AI Literacy: An adaptation of Finland's ICT competence, specifically updated to teach students how to critically evaluate and work alongside generative AI.
  • Working Life Skills & Entrepreneurship: Project ownership and applied problem-solving.
  • Participation & Sustainable Future: Civic engagement and environmental responsibility.

3. Pillar Three: Phenomenon-Based Learning & the Handicraft Strand

This pillar represents the "doing" part of the curriculum, where competencies are practiced on real-world problems.

  • Phenomenon-Based Modules: At least once a year, students complete a multidisciplinary unit organized around a theme (e.g., water or migration) that merges subjects like math, science, and language arts into a single inquiry.
  • The Handicraft Strand (käsityö): A required subject through at least grade 9, consisting of both textile craft (fiber/fabric) and technical craft (wood, metal, electronics).
  • AI Resilience: The framework emphasizes handicraft because embodied, physical-world problem-solving builds the kind of tactic judgment that AI cannot replicate.

4. Pillar Four: Morals & Ethics Education

This is a standalone, secular strand focused on developing moral reasoning rather than just enforcing behavior management.

  • Curriculum: Instruction evolves from basic concepts of fairness and empathy in early grades to structured ethical reasoning and perspective-taking in middle grades.
  • Applied Ethics: Older students focus on contemporary dilemmas, including AI ethics—questions of authorship, bias, and truth in information environments.
  • Goal: The aim is to build reasoning capacity, which is considered one of the hardest human skills for AI tools to simulate or delegate.

Together, these pillars ensure that Pillar One records the journey, Pillar Two provides the vocabulary, Pillar Three offers the practice, and Pillar Four provides the judgment necessary to use those skills effectively.


I can create a tailored report comparing this framework to traditional models or a slide deck summarizing these pillars if you would like to explore these concepts in a different format. Would you like me to do that?

In the HOPES framework, a sharp distinction is made between character-compliance programs and morals and ethics education. While many traditional school systems treat ethics as an incidental byproduct of behavior policy, HOPES establishes ethics as a standalone academic subject.

The key differences between the two are as follows:

1. Focus: Behavior Management vs. Moral Reasoning

  • Character-Compliance Programs: These are typically built around behavior management and discipline. They often focus on "character" as a means of enforcing school rules and maintaining order—essentially training students to comply with established norms.
  • Morals & Ethics (HOPES): This strand focuses on developing moral reasoning capacity. Instead of just teaching students what to do to stay out of trouble, it teaches them how to work through genuine moral dilemmas with others.

2. Delivery: Incidental vs. Explicit Instruction

  • Character-Compliance Programs: In many models, ethical values are treated as a "slogan" or assumed to emerge naturally from incidental classroom culture and discipline policies.
  • Morals & Ethics (HOPES): Ethics is treated as a subject, not a slogan. It is a required, secular strand for every student with dedicated instructional time. The curriculum is structured to evolve with the student:
    • Early Grades: Focus on fairness, empathy, and honesty through discussion.
    • Middle Grades: Focus on structured ethical reasoning frameworks and perspective-taking.
    • Upper Grades: Focus on applied ethics, such as civic, media, and AI ethics (addressing bias, authorship, and truth).

3. The Goal: Compliance vs. Human Judgment

  • Character-Compliance Programs: The primary goal is often a well-regulated classroom where students follow directions and avoid conflict.
  • Morals & Ethics (HOPES): The goal is to build reasoning capacity and judgment, which the framework identifies as one of the hardest human skills for AI tools to simulate or delegate. By focusing on judgment rather than mere compliance, the framework aims to prepare students for a world where they must critically evaluate information and make ethical decisions in complex, AI-mediated environments.
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For an elementary student, the HOPES-Plan serves as the "spine" of their education, functioning not as a traditional report card, but as a living, three-way document that tracks their individual growth trajectory.

Here is what a HOPES-Plan looks like in practice for an elementary-aged child:

1. Structure and Composition

  • Three-Way Ownership: The plan is co-authored and reviewed by the student, the teacher, and the guardian. No party works from the plan alone, ensuring a collaborative support system for the child.
  • Fixed Review Cadence: The plan is reviewed three times per academic year (fall, winter, and spring) through short conferences.
  • Continuous Record: Instead of being reconstructed from scratch every year, it is a continuous plan that follows the student from kindergarten through grade 12.

2. Content and Goal Setting

At the elementary level, the framework explicitly ensures that different aspects of development are balanced. The plan separates goals into three specific domains:

  • Academic Goals: Focused on subject-matter progress.
  • Learning-Skills Goals: Focused on metacognition and "learning how to learn."
  • Social-Emotional Goals: Focused on interpersonal growth and well-being.

During each review, the student sets 2–3 self-authored goals in their own words, which the teacher lightly scaffolds. This emphasizes student agency from a young age.

3. Reporting and Documentation

Rather than using standardized labels or grades, the HOPES-Plan utilizes the following to document progress:

  • Shared Vocabulary: Progress is checked against the Seven Transversal Competencies (such as Multiliteracy, Self-Care, and Thinking/Learning to Learn), which provide a common language for reporting across all subjects.
  • Teacher Observations: The plan logs concrete teacher observations and specific support plans rather than just a status label.
  • Portfolio Evidence: The plan is supported by portfolios of work, including craft process documentation, writing samples, and project artifacts that make the student's thinking visible.

4. Purpose: Growth Over Ranking

The primary function of the elementary HOPES-Plan is to document growth, not just position. It focuses on the process of learning rather than just content coverage. By prioritizing individual growth trajectories over comparative rankings, the plan aims to protect student well-being and equity.

HOPES: Holistic Outcomes-Based Personalized Education System

1. Introduction

This document outlines the framework for HOPES (Holistic Outcomes-Based Personalized Education System), a proposed curriculum designed to replace traditional models like Common Core. Drawing inspiration from the highly successful Finnish and Swedish education systems, particularly their emphasis on personalized learning, transversal competencies, and holistic development, HOPES aims to foster academic excellence, well-being, and future-readiness in an age increasingly shaped by artificial intelligence. The framework integrates key elements such as Finland's seven transversal competencies, phenomenon-based learning, handicraft education, and robust morals and ethics education, while also addressing insights from PISA rankings regarding academic outcomes and student happiness.

 

2. Foundational Principles

HOPES is built upon the following core principles:

 

       Student-Centered Learning: Emphasizing individual growth trajectories and active student participation in learning paths, akin to the Swedish Individuell Utvecklingsplan (IUP) and Finnish Henkilökohtainen Opintosuunnitelma (HOPS) [1, 2].

       Holistic Development: Nurturing intellectual, emotional, social, ethical, and practical skills to ensure well-rounded individuals.

       Future-Readiness: Equipping students with the competencies necessary to thrive in a rapidly evolving, AI-driven world.

       Equity and Inclusivity: Ensuring that all learners have the same right to personal development and learning experiences, regardless of background [3].

       Phenomenon-Based Learning: Integrating real-world topics and interdisciplinary approaches to make learning relevant and engaging [4].

 

3. Inspirations from Nordic Education Systems

3.1. Swedish Individuell Utvecklingsplan (IUP)

The Swedish IUP focuses on the student's individual development plan and learning portfolio. It assesses academic and social standing, outlining planned measures to support continued growth. This approach prioritizes individual growth trajectories over comparative ranking [1, 3].

 

3.2. Finnish Henkilökohtainen Opintosuunnitelma (HOPS)

Similar to IUP, the Finnish HOPS (Personal Study Plan) is a dynamic document created and regularly updated by students with guidance from teachers. It emphasizes student agency and self-directed learning, allowing for personalized learning paths and goal setting [2].

 

3.3. Finland's Seven Transversal Competencies

The Finnish national core curriculum places significant emphasis on transversal competencies, which are integrated across all subjects. These competencies are crucial for navigating a changing society and include [5, 6]:

 

1      Thinking and learning to learn: Developing critical thinking, problem-solving, and metacognitive skills.

2      Cultural competence, interaction, and self-expression: Fostering understanding and respect for diverse cultures, effective communication, and creative expression.

3      Taking care of oneself and managing daily life: Promoting self-awareness, well-being, and practical life skills.

4      Multiliteracy: Developing diverse literacies, including digital, media, and information literacy.

5      ICT competence: Building proficiency in information and communication technologies.

6      Working life competence and entrepreneurship: Cultivating skills for future careers, innovation, and entrepreneurial thinking.

7      Participation, involvement, and building a sustainable future: Encouraging active citizenship, democratic participation, and responsibility towards the environment.

 

3.4. PISA Rankings: Academic Outcomes and Happiness

Finland's consistent high performance in PISA rankings, coupled with high levels of student well-being and happiness, provides a critical benchmark for HOPES. This success is often attributed to a holistic approach that values equity, teacher professionalism, and a less test-driven environment [7]. The focus is on deep learning and understanding rather than rote memorization, contributing to both academic achievement and overall student satisfaction.

 

4. Key Components of the HOPES Curriculum

4.1. Phenomenon-Based Learning (PhBL)

PhBL is a cornerstone of the HOPES framework, inspired by the Finnish model. It involves studying real-world topics or phenomena holistically, integrating multiple disciplinary perspectives. This approach encourages collaborative projects, inquiry-based learning, and real-world connections, making learning relevant and engaging. Teachers act as facilitators, guiding students to take ownership of their learning [4, 8].

 

4.2. Handicraft Education (Käsityö)

Drawing from the Finnish 'käsityö' tradition, HOPES integrates handicraft education as a compulsory subject. This involves both technical work and textile work, fostering creativity, problem-solving, perseverance, and practical skills. It emphasizes a holistic craft process from ideation to creation, promoting an appreciation for craftsmanship and design thinking. This subject also develops working skills such as independent and collaborative work, planning, evaluation, responsible action, and constructive interaction [9, 10].

 

4.3. Morals and Ethics Education

HOPES incorporates a robust morals and ethics education, integrated across the curriculum and through dedicated modules. This aims to develop students' moral reasoning, empathy, and understanding of ethical dilemmas. Inspired by the Finnish model, it emphasizes moral socialization and the development of intellectual resources rooted in universal values, preparing students to be ethically conscious citizens [11, 12].

 

4.4. AI-Readiness and Digital Competencies

Recognizing the transformative impact of AI, HOPES prioritizes AI-readiness. This includes developing AI literacy, critical thinking about AI technologies, and ethical considerations related to AI. Programs like Finland's 'Generation AI' project provide a model for integrating AI education through hands-on activities, collaborative app design, and discussions on algorithmic bias and societal impacts [13, 14]. Digital tools will be integral to learning, research, and creative expression across all subjects.

 

5. Curriculum Structure and Implementation

HOPES will feature a flexible, adaptable curriculum structure that balances foundational knowledge with interdisciplinary exploration. Local curricula will be developed based on national guidelines, allowing for regional needs and interests while maintaining a uniform foundation for equality. Assessment will be diverse, focusing on formative feedback, self-assessment, and peer feedback, alongside summative evaluations that consider the entire learning process and transversal competencies [5].

 

6. Comparison with Common Core (Critique and HOPES' Advantages)

Common Core State Standards have faced criticism for their top-down, regulatory approach, and a lack of significant positive impact on student achievement. Critics argue that Common Core often neglects student prior knowledge, limits teacher flexibility, and can exacerbate existing disparities [15].

 

HOPES addresses these shortcomings by:

 

       Prioritizing Student Agency: Empowering students in their learning journey, rather than imposing a rigid, one-size-fits-all standard.

       Fostering Holistic Skills: Moving beyond narrow academic metrics to develop a broad range of cognitive, social, emotional, and practical competencies.

       Promoting Interdisciplinary Learning: Making education relevant and engaging through real-world phenomena, contrasting with Common Core's subject-specific silos.

       Integrating Ethics and AI-Readiness: Proactively preparing students for future challenges and opportunities, a dimension largely absent in Common Core.

       Supporting Teacher Professionalism: Providing teachers with the flexibility and professional development to implement a dynamic, student-centered curriculum.

 

7. Conclusion: A Future-Ready Framework

HOPES offers a robust, future-ready curriculum framework designed to cultivate well-rounded, adaptable, and ethically conscious individuals. By synthesizing the best practices from leading education systems and integrating essential 21st-century competencies, HOPES aims to provide a transformative educational experience that benefits both teachers and students, preparing them to thrive in an increasingly complex and AI-driven world.

A Structural Comparison: The HOPES Framework vs. Common Core State Standards

1. Executive Overview of Educational Philosophies

The transition from the Common Core State Standards to the HOPES (Holistic Outcomes-Based Personalized Education System) framework represents a systemic shift in educational priority. While the Common Core prioritizes a legacy model of content-standardization designed for uniform delivery, HOPES architecturally embeds a process-standardization model that optimizes for individual growth and the development of specialized, high-value human skills.

The primary mission of HOPES is to optimize for "what AI cannot substitute," moving away from the "content transmission" focus of traditional models which prioritize tasks artificial intelligence now performs with superior speed and accuracy. The HOPES architecture is anchored by three specific Nordic mechanisms that move beyond mere academic benchmarks:

  • IUP (Individuell utvecklingsplan): Adopted from the Swedish model, providing the framework for individual development plans and comprehensive learning portfolios.
  • HOPS (Henkilökohtainen oppimissuunnitelma): A Finnish-inspired dynamic study plan that empowers student agency and long-term goal setting.
  • The Seven Transversal Competencies: These serve as the shared reporting language that bridges the gap between individual plans and multidisciplinary modules. This includes "Digital & AI Literacy"—an intentional evolution of traditional ICT competence designed for a generative AI landscape.

2. Architecture of Planning: The HOPES-Plan vs. Grade-Level Pacing

In a traditional Common Core environment, the primary planning unit is the Grade-Level Pacing Guide, which dictates the timeline for content coverage across a standardized cohort. In contrast, the HOPES-Plan serves as the "spine" of the curriculum, documenting the individual growth trajectory of the learner rather than their position relative to a bell curve.

Structure of the HOPES-Plan:

  • Three-Way Ownership
    • Student: Exercises agency by self-authoring 2–3 goals per cycle in their own words.
    • Teacher: Acts as a professional consultant, lightly scaffolding goals and logging concrete observations.
    • Guardian: Provides collaborative support and continuity between the home and school environment.
  • Tri-Annual Review Cadence
    • Progress is assessed and goals are recalibrated three times per year (fall, winter, and spring) through dedicated three-way conferences.
  • Continuous K–12 Record
    • The plan is a living document that follows the student from kindergarten through graduation, ensuring a longitudinal record of evolution across three distinct domains:
      1. Academic: Subject-matter progress and mastery.
      2. Learning-Skills: Metacognition and "learning how to learn."
      3. Social-Emotional: Interpersonal growth and systemic well-being.

3. Subject Structure and Methodology: Siloed Content vs. Phenomenon-Based Inquiry

The Common Core typically organizes instruction into discrete, siloed subjects where math, science, and language arts are taught in isolation. HOPES disrupts this through Pillar Three: Phenomenon-Based Modules.

These multidisciplinary modules (e.g., "Water," "Migration," or "The Local Watershed") require students to merge math, science, and language arts into a single, coherent inquiry. Every project within this strand follows a rigorous design → make → evaluate cycle. Students must document their initial plan, execute a physical or conceptual build, and provide a reflective evaluation against their original intent. This moves the pedagogical focus from isolated drills to coherent, applied inquiry.

4. The Human Element: Common Crafts (Käsityö) and Explicit Ethics

HOPES mandates the Common Crafts (käsityö) strand and a standalone Morals & Ethics strand, both of which are largely absent or relegated to electives in the Common Core model.

Morals & Ethics Education: A Strategic Comparison

Dimension

Character-Compliance (Common Core)

Morals & Ethics (HOPES)

Focus

Behavior: Enforcing rules and maintaining order.

Reasoning: Developing the capacity to navigate moral dilemmas.

Delivery

Incidental: Values as slogans or byproducts of discipline.

Explicit: A standalone, secular subject with dedicated time.

Goal

Compliance: Training students to follow directions.

Judgment: Building reasoning that AI cannot simulate.

The pedagogical rationale for mandatory Handicraft (käsityö)—comprising both Textile Craft (fiber and soft materials) and Technical Craft (wood, metal, and electronics)—is to build "tacit, physical-world judgment." By requiring students to engage in embodied, multi-material problem-solving through Grade 9, HOPES builds cognitive infrastructure that resists AI replication. Crucially, the documentation of the process, rather than the final object, serves as the unit of assessment.

5. AI Readiness: Proactive Literacy vs. Standardized Recall

While the Common Core posture toward AI remains largely unaddressed or focused on banning the technology to protect standardized outputs, HOPES treats AI as a force that fundamentally changes the value of what is taught.

HOPES employs three structural responses for AI-readiness:

  1. Doubling down on non-automatable skills: Increasing the weight of oracy, embodied craft, and collaborative problem-framing.
  2. Teaching AI as an object of study: Under the "Digital & AI Literacy" competency, students move beyond simple tool use to interrogate AI systems for bias, provenance, hallucination, and authorship.
  3. Protecting the "struggle that builds capability": Utilizing process-based assessment to make thinking visible at intermediate stages, preventing AI-assisted shortcuts from eroding the cognitive development inherent in the "struggle" of learning.

6. Success Measures and the Stakes of Assessment

HOPES shifts away from the high-stakes, gatekeeping standardized tests that define the Common Core. Instead, it utilizes a diagnostic model where standardized measurement is demoted to one of many inputs to prevent teachers and students from "adapting to the measurement itself."

HOPES Assessment Instruments

Instrument

Frequency

Purpose

Portfolio Evidence

Ongoing

Documentation of craft, writing samples, and project artifacts.

Competency Checkpoints

3x per year

Teacher-rated progress against the Seven Transversal Competencies.

Phenomenon Module Evaluation

End of Module

Rubric-based assessment of multidisciplinary inquiry.

Standardized Measures

Periodic

Low-stakes diagnostic input; never used as the sole promotion gate.

7. The Teacher Model: Delivery vs. Design

The role of the educator is reimagined from a content deliverer to a high-level professional designer. The HOPES model is built upon teacher trust and professional autonomy.

  • Master’s-Level Entry: Requires deep subject-matter and pedagogical expertise as the baseline credential.
  • High Professional Autonomy: Teachers have the freedom to determine module design, pacing, and materials without scripted curricula.
  • Collaborative Planning Time: The school day includes built-in time for cross-subject phenomenon-module design and peer review.
  • Reduced External Inspection: Following the Finnish trust model, heavy external inspection regimes are replaced by peer review and portfolio evidence.
  • Co-Authoring Role: Teachers act as expert consultants who co-author student plans and exercise professional judgment in assessing growth.

8. Conclusion: Shifting the Target

The HOPES framework emphasizes personal growth and process over the exhaustive content coverage prioritized by the Common Core. By centering the curriculum on the HOPES-Plan, transversal competencies, and hands-on inquiry, the system fosters the resilience and self-direction required for a rapidly evolving future.

The argument for replacing the Common Core is not about achieving a higher standardized test score; it is about aiming for a "better-aimed target." In an AI-saturated economy where content is cheap, the value of education lies in developing the human judgment, ethical reasoning, and embodied skills that technology cannot replace.

 

References

[1] IUP Portfolio - Wikipedia [2] Personal study plan (HOPS) - University of Helsinki [3] The Scandinavian Educational Model: Inclusive Support - Reading Sage [4] What is the Finnish phenomenon-based learning approach? - VisitEDUfinn [5] National core curriculum for primary and lower secondary (basic) education - Finnish National Agency for Education [6] Single-structure primary and lower secondary education - Eurydice [7] PISA 2022 - OECD [8] Phenomenon-based learning in Finland: a critical overview of its historical and philosophical roots - Tandfonline [9] Crafts (Craft and Design or Handicraft) in Finnish Education - Finnish National Agency for Education [10] Common and holistic crafts education in Finland - Journals.oslomet.no [11] Chapter 4 Moral Education in Finland - Brill [12] Ethics in the Teaching Profession: The Finnish Model - Academia.edu [13] AI education in Finland: Enhancing children’s understanding, critical thinking and creativity through collaborative designing of AI apps - University of Eastern Finland [14] Future Ready with AI - All4Ed [15] Why Common Core failed - Brookings