In simple terms
A friendly intro before the formal notes — no formulas yet.
Your Personal Blueprint: Strengths & Growth
Learning Outcome 1 is the starting point for your entire CAS journey. It's about creating a personal map: knowing where you are strong (your strengths) and identifying the new territories you want to explore and develop (your areas for growth).
Think of yourself as a gardener. Your 'strengths' are the plants that are already flourishing - you know how to care for them and they produce great results. Your 'areas for growth' are new seeds you want to plant. You need to research them, prepare the soil (plan your CAS experience), and tend to them carefully (reflect on your progress) to help them grow into something strong.
- 1
Brainstorm a wide range of your skills, not just academic ones. Think about social, practical, and creative abilities.
- 2
Reframe 'weaknesses' as 'areas for growth'. Instead of 'I'm bad at public speaking', write 'I aim to develop my confidence in public speaking'.
- 3
Select a CAS experience that directly challenges you in your chosen area for growth. Your plan should explicitly state this connection.
- 4
Document your starting point. Before you begin, write a reflection or record a video explaining your current ability level and what you hope to achieve. This provides a baseline to measure your growth against.
Explore the concept
Use the live diagram and synced steps — play it or tap a step card to walk through.
Full topic notes
Formal explanation with the rigour you need for the exam.
Deconstructing Learning Outcome 1: 'Identify' and 'Develop'
The command terms in LO1 are precise. 'Identify' requires more than just stating a strength. It means you must be able to analyse your own skills, provide specific examples of when you have used them, and articulate why they are strengths. 'Develop' means you must show a process of growth over time. This is not about becoming perfect, but about demonstrating a conscious effort to improve. Your CAS portfolio must contain evidence of both this initial identification and the subsequent development process.
Identify: Pinpoint specific skills or attributes. Provide concrete examples from your life (academic or personal).
Analyse: Explain why it is a strength. How does it help you? Where did you develop it?
Develop: Frame a 'weakness' as a positive 'area for growth'. This shows a proactive, growth-oriented mindset.
Connect: Explicitly link your chosen CAS experiences to your identified areas for growth. This demonstrates intentionality.
Moving Beyond the Obvious: Identifying Authentic Strengths
Many students default to listing academic strengths like 'good at maths' or 'organised with my studies'. While valid, these can be limiting. To produce a compelling portfolio, you must dig deeper. Consider your strengths across different domains:
- Interpersonal: Are you an empathetic listener? A clear communicator? A natural leader or a supportive collaborator?
- Intrapersonal: Are you resilient in the face of setbacks? Do you have strong self-discipline? Are you highly reflective?
- Practical: Can you cook, build, code, or repair things? Do you have first-aid skills?
- Creative: Are you a divergent thinker who generates many ideas? A musician? A visual artist? A creative writer?
Identifying a less obvious strength, like 'the ability to make new people feel welcome', and then using that strength in a service project, shows a higher level of self-awareness.
Framing 'Weaknesses' as 'Areas for Growth'
The language you use is critical. The CAS programme is not interested in a list of your flaws. It is interested in your potential and your willingness to engage in challenging experiences to realise that potential. Avoid negative, static statements like 'I am disorganised'. Instead, adopt a forward-looking, proactive tone: 'I am developing organisational skills' or 'I aim to improve my time management'. This reframing is not just about semantics; it reflects a fundamental shift in mindset from being fixed in your abilities to believing in your capacity for growth. This growth mindset is precisely what your CAS coordinator and the IB want to see evidenced in your portfolio.
When writing about an area for growth, always pair it with a proposed action. For instance, instead of just saying 'I want to be more collaborative', write 'To develop my collaborative skills, I have joined the school orchestra's organising committee, where I will be responsible for coordinating with the woodwind section. This will require me to negotiate, compromise, and communicate effectively within a team setting.' This shows foresight and planning, key elements of the CAS Stages.
Documenting Your Journey: Evidence for LO1
Your reflections are the narrative, but evidence provides the proof. To fully demonstrate LO1, you must substantiate your claims. If you state you have identified a strength, what evidence proves it? If you claim to have developed an area for growth, how can you show this transformation? Your portfolio should be a rich collection of multimedia items that, together with your written reflections, tell a complete story of your personal development.
Q: Do I have to be bad at something for it to be an 'area for growth'?
A: Not at all. An area for growth can also be about taking an existing skill to a new level. For example, if you are a competent swimmer (strength), an area for growth could be developing the leadership and safety skills to become a qualified swimming instructor. It's about stretching yourself, not just fixing deficits.
Q: How often should I reflect on my strengths and growth?
A: LO1 is not a one-time activity. You should revisit it throughout your CAS journey. A good practice is to reflect at the beginning of an experience (planning), during it (monitoring progress), and after it (evaluating growth). This shows a continuous cycle of self-assessment and development.
Q: Can a single CAS experience address multiple areas for growth?
A: Yes, and this is often the case in rich, well-planned experiences. For example, organising a charity concert could help you develop skills in financial management, public speaking, and teamwork. The key is to be specific in your reflections about which aspects of the experience are targeting which areas of growth.
Q: What if I fail to develop in my chosen area?
A: CAS is about the process, not just the outcome. Reflecting honestly on why you struggled, what you learned from the 'failure', and what you would do differently next time is an incredibly powerful demonstration of growth and self-awareness. An insightful reflection on a setback is far more valuable than a superficial success story.
Initial Assessment: A written entry, mind map, or short video diary entry outlining your strengths and growth areas at the very start of your CAS journey.
Planning Documents: Show your investigation and preparation. A project proposal that explicitly mentions which area for growth the experience targets is excellent evidence.
Action in Progress: Photos or short video clips of you engaged in the experience. A photo of you looking nervous before a public speech, paired with one of you looking confident afterwards, is a powerful narrative tool.
Feedback: An email from a supervisor, a screenshot of a collaborative document with comments, or a summary of verbal feedback you received can corroborate your reflections on growth.
Final Demonstration: The final product of your project (e.g., a recording of your performance, the website you built, the final fundraising total) serves as evidence of the skills you've developed.
Worked examples
See the formulas applied — reveal one step at a time, like the exam.
Portfolio Entry Prompt: At the beginning of your CAS journey, reflect on a personal strength you believe will be valuable, and identify a related area where you see potential for growth.
- 1
Title: Initial Reflection: Leveraging Communication Skills for Leadership Development
Portfolio Entry Prompt: After your first meeting for the 'Community Garden Project', reflect on how your initial understanding of your strengths and areas for growth has been challenged or confirmed.
- 1
Title: Reflection 1: Community Garden Project - Planning Stage
How it all connects
The big idea sits in the middle — tap a linked idea to explore the link.
Tap a linked idea to see how it connects back to the main topic — that connection is what examiners reward.
Glossary
Try to recall each definition before you reveal it.
Quick check
Answer in your head first — then tap to check. No pressure.
Revision flashcards
Flip the card. Test yourself before the exam.
Learning Outcome 1 (LO1)
Identify own strengths and develop areas for growth. This is the foundational outcome for the CAS programme.
Key takeaways
Review these before you close the topic — retrieval beats re-reading.
- ✓
Identify: Pinpoint specific skills or attributes. Provide concrete examples from your life (academic or personal).
- ✓
Analyse: Explain why it is a strength. How does it help you? Where did you develop it?
- ✓
Develop: Frame a 'weakness' as a positive 'area for growth'. This shows a proactive, growth-oriented mindset.
- ✓
Connect: Explicitly link your chosen CAS experiences to your identified areas for growth. This demonstrates intentionality.
Practice — then mark it
The whole point: a real Cambridge question, marked mark-by-mark.
Test Your Understanding of LO1
Test Your Understanding of LO1
Extra simulations & links
PhET, GeoGebra and other curated tools — open in a new tab.
Checkpoint
One marked question is worth ten re-reads — close the loop before you move on.
Reading it isn’t knowing it — prove it.
Before you move on: do Test Your Understanding of LO1 on paper, snap a photo, and get examiner-style feedback on exactly where you win and lose marks.