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Schools can differentiate the teaching and learning across different student profiles and courses
by varying the
teaching and learning materials/resources;
learning activities/processes;
types, requirements or specifications of assignments/products/artworks;
learning environment, such as organisation of studio space and routines.
Please refer to the Teaching and Learning Guide for more information and examples on
differentiation across courses. Within the same course and class, teachers can also provide more
targeted support to different learners using different scaffolds.
Scaffolding Learning
Further support in the form of scaffolding for student learning could include
Making available different learning resources for specific student profiles;
Simplifying lessons and instructions, such as by breaking instructions into smaller, segments
for ‘bite-sized’ learning or into step-by-step format;
Describing or illustrating concepts and processes in multiple ways;
Modelling and showing student exemplars or samples of what they need to do;
Highlighting, making explicit and role-modelling the strategies for thinking and application.
One specific approach to scaffold students’ learning is through the use of the
Gradual Release of
Responsibility
model (Fisher & Frey, 2007). With this model, teachers progressively relinquish their
teaching roles by enabling students to take greater responsibility for their learning through
collaborative, and eventually independent learning. For example, learning can start with a larger
proportion of teacher instruction and demonstration, which then progresses to the teacher
guiding and prompting students during their learning. As students gain more confidence, they can
be enabled to take more ownership of their work through collaborative tasks with other students,
and eventually to independent individual work.
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