Coming to a School District Near You: ‘Portrait of a Graduate’

5Mind. The Meme Platform

Advocates say academic achievement alone won’t prepare young people to keep up with the changing society and technology.

In the months and years ahead, public school communities across the nation might be buzzing about the “Five Cs.”

Those Cs are not letter grades in a handful of core subject areas, although critics of this growing initiative say that less academic rigor would reflect such mediocrity. The concept—also referred to as the new North Star for academic achievement—prioritizes Critical thinking, Communication, Collaboration, Creativity, and Citizenship.

An increasing number of states are phasing in these “Portrait of a Graduate” frameworks that advocates say will better prepare young people for future careers and adult life, especially considering rapid technological and societal changes brought on by artificial intelligence. In many cases, testing and assessments are deprioritized, raising questions about suitable metrics and rubrics for measuring academic achievement at a time when reading and math scores are declining or remaining stagnant across K-12.

“Both very blue and very red states have undertaken the effort,” Harry Feder, executive director of FairTest, a nonprofit organization that advocates fair and open testing, said in a 2025 report. He estimates that at least 20 states and hundreds of school districts have adopted a Portrait of a Graduate framework.

“Having young people prepared to contribute meaningfully to society and the economy seems a fairly universal goal.”

Where, Why, and How

FairTest’s list of 20 states with a plan implemented or in progress includes states in every region of the country, plus Hawaii. Florida and Texas are not on the list. California is not listed as a state participant yet, but several of its districts have adopted Portrait of a Graduate guidelines.

The first states to adopt these policies were South Carolina, Utah, Washington, and Virginia, according to the National Association of State Boards of Education (NASBE). These changes took place before the COVID-19 pandemic and the loss of learning that followed.

In South Carolina, business leaders provided the state with descriptions of employable skills. In Utah, the Department of Education designed a “Talent Map” that recognizes academic mastery in subject areas while also encouraging students to develop and demonstrate character traits such as integrity and resilience. Washington State’s Portrait of a Graduate framework is centered on diversity and “cultural competency.” Virginia’s, which codified the “Five Cs” into a state law, promotes project-based learning, according to the NASBE.

New York State’s plan, adopted last summer, would eventually eliminate the Regents exams that require passing scores for high school graduation. The exams will still be administered as a requirement for federal funding, but students in the Class of 2028 and beyond won’t need passing grades.

Instead, diploma candidates must demonstrate a strong foundation in the state learning standards as well as “the knowledge and skills necessary to achieve success in college, careers, civic engagement, service, and life,” the Department of Education website says. It also says that Regents exam scores, presentations, projects, and portfolios are the options candidates can include in their “portraits” for graduation.

The department hasn’t yet announced what changes, if any, will be made to core subject completion requirements and elective courses.

The California Department of Education announced on March 2 that it’s planning workshops to develop statewide Portrait of a Graduate guidelines focused on deeper learning for 21st century skills and innovative uses of technology.

Hezekiah Herrera, a San Diego K-12 education consultant who has worked on this initiative with districts in several states, including New York and California, said Portrait of a Graduate is a conceptualization of what schools should be producing, as opposed to measuring student success based on standardized tests and content mastery. So far, schools have struggled to develop a subjective system for evaluating student portfolios.

“When you take a math test, there is one correct answer. When you assess a capstone project that demonstrates civic engagement, you are making a subjective decision each and every time,” Herrera told The Epoch Times. “We are being asked to eliminate accountability mechanisms in the midst of a learning crisis that has yet to be resolved.”

By Aaron Gifford

Read Full Article on TheEpochTimes.com

Contact Your Elected Officials
The Epoch Times
The Epoch Timeshttps://www.theepochtimes.com/
Tired of biased news? The Epoch Times is truthful, factual news that other media outlets don't report. No spin. No agenda. Just honest journalism like it used to be.
00:02:04

Forged on the frontier

George Washington is widely known as a general and president, but his early life remains obscured by myth, legend, and misunderstanding.
00:02:52

A bobblehead too far

The Orioles did not just hand out a bobblehead. They sent a message that the legacy of their own players is not enough to draw.

Congress fumbles college sports

College sports landscape is a dumpster fire and every sports reporter, broadcaster and fan believes Congress needs to stay out of it.

The Hating Game

The Democrat Party game show should be titled "The Hating Game", played by pitting one class, race, or identity against another for political power.
00:09:50

The Invasion Of The Ballot Snatchers

As election results loom, California faces ballot controversies in a real-life political drama that raises concerns about election integrity.

Ro Khanna Becomes First in Congress to Sign Pledge Rejecting AIPAC Money

Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) become the first member of Congress to sign a pledge to refuse campaign money from AIPAC and other pro-Israel groups.
00:04:58

What to Know About the Alleged Plot to Attack the White House UFC Event

Five men have been charged in an alleged plot to carry out a mass-casualty attack at a UFC event on White House grounds.
00:24:56

Violent Antifa Activists ‘Infiltrated’ Peaceful Protesters in Minnesota: US Attorney

An Antifa group “infiltrated and exploited lawful protests” while they disrupted federal immigration enforcement officers earlier this year, alleged Minnesota U.S. Attorney Daniel Rosen.
00:01:01

Trump Cancels Senate Hearing for DNI Pick, Alleges Democrats Broke Agreement

President Donald Trump on June 17 canceled a hearing slated for June 17 for his pick to be the next director of national intelligence (DNI).
00:01:33

Trump Unveils New Air Force One Plane

President Trump unveiled the plane that will serve as the new Air Force One, a Boeing 747-8 luxury jet that was gifted to the US by the Qatari government in 2025.
00:01:27

Trump Threatens 100 Percent Tariff on French Wines Over Digital Services Tax

Trump threatened to impose a 100% tariff on French wines and champagne unless France eliminates its digital services tax on large American tech companies.

Trump Heads to G7 Summit in France: Here’s What to Expect

U.S. President Donald Trump is en route to France on June 15 to attend the annual G7 summit, just hours after announcing a deal with Iran.
00:01:27

Trump Reopens Pacific Marine Monuments to Commercial Fishing

President Donald Trump on Thursday issued a proclamation reopening large portions of several Pacific marine national monuments to commercial fishing.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

MAGA Business Central