(And How NovaQuest Academy Builds It Every Day)
Most parents say they want their children to be confident, motivated and capable of making good decisions.
But very few schools actually teach the skill that makes all of that possible.
That skill is agency.
At NovaQuest Academy, agency is not a buzzword.
It is one of the foundations of how children learn, work and grow inside our online school.
This blog explains what agency really means for children, and what we actively do at NovaQuest to develop it.
What does agency mean for kids?
In simple terms, agency means a child believes they can influence their own life, and has real opportunities to practise doing so.
A child with agency:
- Makes choices and understands their consequences
- Feels responsible for their work
- Takes initiative instead of waiting to be told
- Believes their actions matter
Educational research often describes agency as the learner’s ability to set goals, act intentionally and reflect on outcomes.
Psychologist Albert Bandura showed that children’s belief in their own effectiveness strongly shapes motivation and behaviour.
If children lack control over meaningful tasks, their motivation gradually declines.
This is one of the quiet failures of traditional schooling.
Children spend years following instructions but rarely directing their own learning.
What is agency in children?
In children, agency manifests through behaviour, not personality.
You can recognise agency when a child:
- Asks their own questions
- Proposes ideas instead of waiting for worksheets
- Takes responsibility when something goes wrong
- Adapts when a plan fails
- Reflects on what they would do differently next time
Agency is not:
- Being loud
- Being confident on camera
- Being naturally outgoing (extroverted)
Some of the most agentic children are quiet, reflective and highly focused (introverts).

At NovaQuest Academy, we deliberately design learning situations where children must:
- Choose a path
- Test an idea
- Work with uncertainty
- Evaluate their own results
Agency grows through practice, not through praise.
What does it mean to give kids agency?
Giving children agency does not mean removing structure.
It means changing who makes which decisions.
At NovaQuest, children are given structured freedom in areas such as:
- Project direction
- Problem framing
- Tools and methods
- Team roles
- Presentation formats
For example, in a NovaQuest entrepreneurship challenge, children do not receive a fixed product brief.
They receive:
- A real-world problem
- A user profile
- A set of constraints
They decide:
- What to build
- Who they serve
- How do they test their idea
- How they present their learning
Mentors guide, challenge and question, but do not control the learning process.
This mirrors how learning happens in real life.
What is the simple definition of agency?
Agency is the ability to choose, act and take responsibility for the outcome.
That is all.
If a child cannot choose, cannot act and is not accountable for results, agency cannot develop.
Many schools unintentionally remove these three ingredients:
- Choices are standardised
- Actions are pre-designed
- Responsibility belongs to the teacher or the marking scheme
NovaQuest reverses that logic.

How do children develop agency?
Children develop agency when three conditions exist consistently:
1. Meaningful decisions
Children must make decisions that actually affect what happens next.
Not pretend choices.
Not cosmetic options.
Real decisions.
2. Real consequences
When an idea does not work, the child must experience the outcome and learn from it.
Not be rescued immediately.
Not be over-protected from failure.
3. Reflection and feedback
Agency grows when children pause and ask:
- What worked?
- What didn’t?
- What would I change?
At NovaQuest Academy, reflection is embedded into every learning block.
Children keep:
- Project journals
- Learning retrospectives
- Team debriefs
This is strongly supported by international research on student agency and self-regulated learning (OECD).

How to teach a child agency?
At NovaQuest, agency is built deliberately through our TEAM (Technology, Entrepreneurship, Arts & Mindfulness) and STARTUP frameworks: (Sales & Marketing, Team & Talent, Accounting & Finance, Research & Product Development, Technology & Tools, Understanding Customers, Purpose & Leadership).
Here is what this looks like in practice.
Project-led learning instead of subject silos.
Children work on interdisciplinary challenges that combine:
- Business thinking
- Digital tools
- Creative production
- Social and environmental problems
They are not moving from lesson to lesson.
They are managing a project.
1. Real entrepreneurship challenges
Students design:
- Micro-ventures
- Digital products
- Service ideas
- Social initiatives
They conduct:
- Customer interviews
- Basic market research
- Prototyping
- Testing
This gives children a powerful message: Your ideas can have a real-world impact.
2. Team roles and responsibility
Every project includes rotating roles:
- Project lead
- Researcher
- Designer
- Communicator
- Operations coordinator
Children experience leadership and followership.
Agency develops inside teams, not only individually.
3. Failure as a learning tool
At NovaQuest, children complete structured challenges such as:
- Rapid prototyping sprints
- Test-and-iterate cycles
- The “you-must-fail” challenge
Failure is treated as data.
Not as a personal weakness.
This is particularly important for neurodivergent learners.
4. Mindfulness and emotional regulation
Agency collapses when children feel overwhelmed, anxious or afraid of making mistakes.
Our Mindfulness pillar trains:
- Emotional awareness
- Decision-making under pressure
- Reflection and self-regulation
Children learn to recognise internal signals before acting, a critical life skill for independent learning.
5. Portfolio-based assessment
Instead of grades as the main signal of progress, children build:
- Project portfolios
- Venture case studies
- Creative artefacts
- Reflection reports
Parents see:
- How decisions were made
- How learning evolved
- How problems were solved
Agency becomes visible.
Why agency matters more than ever for future education
My MBA research showed a clear pattern: parents are no longer solely looking for academic outcomes.
Parents are searching for:
- Adaptability
- Confidence
- Initiative
- Real-world skills
The future of work will not reward compliance.
It will reward people who can:
- Identify problems
- Design solutions
- Learn continuously
- Collaborate across disciplines
Agency is the foundation beneath every one of those abilities.
What makes NovaQuest Academy different?
NovaQuest Academy is not a flexible version of school.
It is a startup-style learning environment designed for children.
Children do not prepare for life after school.
They practise life while learning.
Agency is not an optional extra.
It is the core of our educational model.
Next step
If you are looking for an alternative to traditional schooling, one that genuinely develops independence, creativity and responsibility, NovaQuest Academy is currently preparing its first full intake in the UK.
Register your interest in NovaQuest Academy and be the first to receive information about admissions, curriculum structure and our upcoming parent information sessions.
Your child does not need more worksheets.
They need space to become someone who can transform their world.

Diana Pineda is an entrepreneur, educator, and author passionate about reimagining education for the next generation. She is the founder of Rhema E-School and NovaQuest Academy. She holds an MBA in Marketing from the University of Greenwich, England. She is a graduate of Universidad Externado de Colombia with a degree in Finance and International Relations and a specialist in Pedagogy and Didactics from Universidad de Medellín.