Achievement Passport
A private record for capturing a student's achievements in and out of school, designed for reviews, awards, and application-style summaries.
Why it matters
It turns fragmented milestones, evidence, and strengths into a calmer, more structured whole-child record with a practical real-world use case.
This is an in-development concept. What is shown is an early prototype exploration, not a finished product.
Product directions
Whole-child record
The focus is on the full picture — academic, extracurricular, personal strengths, and real-world experience — rather than grades and reports in isolation.
Designed for real use moments
The product should earn its place at award applications, school reviews, and transition points — not just sit passively in a drawer.
Private and portable
It belongs to the student and family, not the institution. The data should be structured enough to be useful but calm enough to not feel like surveillance.
Evidence-first capture
Entries should anchor to evidence — something real happened, something was learned, something was demonstrated. That creates a record worth trusting.
Open questions
- What is the minimum useful feature set before this becomes genuinely usable at a real review moment?
- How structured does the evidence capture need to be — freeform notes, categories, or something more templated?
- How does it handle the transition from primary to secondary, or school to post-16?
- Who is the primary user in practice — the student, the parent, or both — and does that change the interface?
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