
Parents spend a lot of time tracking the academic stuff. What reading level? How'd they do on the math test? But there's another set of skills that research consistently links to long-term success — and most of us have no real way to gauge where our kids stand.
A 2026 report from the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching and ETS identifies three "durable skills" as essential for success in school, work, and life: collaboration, communication, and critical thinking. What makes this framework different from the usual "21st-century skills" language is the specificity. Carnegie and ETS map out exactly how each skill develops — moving through four distinct levels — so there's something measurable to work with.
This parent assessment is built directly from that framework. It takes about 3 minutes. At the end, you'll have a clearer picture of where your child currently sits on each skill, and what to focus on next.
This assessment works best for kids ages 9 and up. If your child is younger, don't stress the scoring — but the skill descriptions in the results section are still a useful window into what to nurture early.
The Carnegie Foundation defines durable skills as the capabilities that "distinguish human contribution" — especially as AI takes over more work that used to require rote knowledge and rule-following. The three skills are:
Each skill develops through four levels: Exploring, Analyzing, Integrating, and Extending. Kids don't jump from one level to the next overnight — growth is gradual, and it's often uneven across the three skills.
One thing worth noting: these skills overlap intentionally. Active listening, for instance, shows up in both communication and collaboration. That's not an inconsistency in the framework — it reflects how these skills function in real life.
There are 9 questions total: 3 for each skill. For each question, pick the answer that best describes your child most of the time. There are no right or wrong answers here — the goal is an honest picture, not a flattering one.
Keep track of your answers (A, B, C, or D) for each section. You'll score them separately by skill at the end.
Question 1: When your child works on a group project, how do they typically handle other people's ideas?
Question 2: When disagreement comes up in a group, what does your child usually do?
Question 3: How does your child contribute their own ideas in a group setting?
Question 4: When your child tries to explain something to someone who doesn't know much about it, how do they approach it?
Question 5: When someone else is talking, how does your child typically listen?
Question 6: When your child writes or presents something, what does it tend to look like?

Question 7: When your child comes across a new claim or piece of information, what do they typically do?
Question 8: When your child faces a complex problem with no clear answer, how do they respond?
Question 9: When your child forms an opinion or argument, how do they build it?
Count up the A's, B's, C's, and D's for each section separately. The letter you chose most in each section gives you a rough level for that skill:
Most kids will score at different levels across the three skills. That's completely normal. Uneven development is the rule, not the exception.
That's where to put deliberate attention, not pressure. Skills at the Exploring level are being built from the ground up. What helps most is exposure and low-stakes practice. Group projects, collaborative classes, and activities that require listening and responding to others all create the right conditions for growth.
For collaboration and communication specifically, live collaboration classes on Outschool put kids in small-group environments where they practice these skills in real time — with other kids, not a worksheet.
At this level, the awareness is there. Your child notices what's happening in these skill areas. The next step is moving from awareness to action. Guided reflection helps most: talking through what went well in a group project, asking "how did you decide that?" after they form an argument, or encouraging them to name what made a conversation go well or not.
Communication classes that involve structured feedback — where kids practice adapting to different audiences and hear from a teacher how it landed — are particularly effective at this stage.
These kids are doing something right, and they often don't get enough credit for it. The challenge at these levels is finding environments that actually match their capability. Generic group work where they're the one holding everything together isn't skill development — it's labor.
Look for contexts that stretch them: debate formats, project-based classes, leadership roles in group settings, or classes that work explicitly on critical thinking and evidence-based argument. Public speaking and debate are among the most direct paths to the Extending level for both communication and critical thinking.
The Carnegie Foundation's report is direct about the stakes: as AI reshapes work and civic life, the skills that distinguish human contribution — collaboration, clear communication, and critical thinking — have become essential, not optional. We've written before about the skills AI can't replace, and the enrollment data from Outschool's own marketplace mirrors what Carnegie's research describes. Families are actively prioritizing these skills right now.
The challenge is that schools often struggle to develop and credential them with the same rigor applied to academic content. That's not a criticism of teachers — it's a structural problem. Most assessment systems are built around content knowledge, not the kind of judgment and interpersonal capability Carnegie and ETS are describing.
That gap is where parents can make a real difference. You don't need to redesign your curriculum or run formal assessments. But having a framework for what these skills actually look like — and where your child stands — gives you something concrete to work with.
Are these skills only relevant for older kids?
The Carnegie framework describes how collaboration, communication, and critical thinking develop from early childhood through high school. Even young kids show early forms of all three — asking questions to understand others, listening without interrupting, noticing when something seems wrong. The Exploring level is genuinely appropriate for elementary-age kids.
My child scored at different levels for each skill. Is that a problem?
Not at all. It's actually what the research predicts. These three skills develop at different rates and in different contexts. A strong communicator might still be at the Analyzing level for critical thinking, especially if they haven't had much practice with evidence-based argument. Uneven profiles are normal.
How is this different from general "soft skills" or social-emotional learning?
The Carnegie and ETS framework is grounded in decades of research from social, developmental, and cognitive sciences — not general intuition about what "good kids" look like. The four-level progressions are designed to support actual assessment and instructional planning. It's more structured than most SEL frameworks, and it ties directly to outcomes in school, work, and life.
Can Outschool classes actually help build these skills?
Yes — and it's partly structural. Small live classes with real back-and-forth between kids build collaboration and communication in ways that solo content consumption doesn't. Debate and argumentation classes specifically target evidence-based reasoning and structured argument, which maps directly to the Integrating and Extending levels of critical thinking.
How often should I revisit this assessment?
Once or twice a year is plenty. These skills develop slowly and unevenly — checking too frequently creates anxiety rather than insight. Use it as a planning tool, not a progress tracker.
This assessment is adapted from the Skills Progressions framework developed by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching and ETS (2026). The full report is available at carnegiefoundation.org/defining-and-developing-skills.