Scaffolding

Tiered instructional Supports

What is Scaffolding?

In education, scaffolding refers to a variety of instructional techniques used to move students progressively toward stronger understanding and ultimately, greater independence in the learning process.  The term itself offers the relevant descriptive metaphor: teachers provide successive levels of temporary support that help students reach higher levels of comprehension and skill acquisition that they would not be able to achieve without assistance.

Scaffolding vs. Differentiation

As a general instructional strategy, scaffolding shares many similarities with differentiation, which refers to a wide variety of teaching techniques and lesson adaptations that educators use to instruct a diverse group of students, with diverse learning needs, in the same course, classroom, or learning environment. Because scaffolding and differentiation techniques are used to achieve similar instructional goals—i.e., moving student learning and understanding from where it is to where it needs to be—the two approaches may be blended together in some classrooms to the point of being indistinguishable. That said, the two approaches are distinct in several ways.

Scaffold: When teachers scaffold instruction, they typically break up a learning experience, concept, or skill into discrete parts, and then give students the assistance they need to learn each part. For example, teachers may give students an excerpt of a longer text to read, engage them in a discussion of the excerpt to improve their understanding of its purpose, and teach them the vocabulary they need to comprehend the text before assigning them the full reading.

Differentiate: Alternatively, when teachers differentiate instruction, they might give some students an entirely different reading (to better match their reading level and ability), give the entire class the option to choose from among several texts (so each student can pick the one that interests them most), or give the class several options for completing a related assignment (for example, the students might be allowed to write a traditional essay, draw an illustrated essay in comic-style form, create a slideshow “essay” with text and images, or deliver an oral presentation).

Example: Without Scaffolding
When I taught my daughter to ride her bike, I explained to her how to do it.  Then I put her on the bike and gave her a shove.

Example: With Scaffolding
When I taught my daughter to ride her bike, I sat on the bike to demonstrate how to ride.  I started her out with training wheels. then I gradually raised the training wheels. Once she was ready to remove the training wheels, I steadied her with my hand and walked beside her, and only then did I let her take off on her own.

Content Scaffolding


One type of instructional scaffolding is referred to as content scaffolding. For this type of scaffolding, the teacher selects content that is not too difficult or unfamiliar for students learning a new skill. Doing so allows students to focus on the skill being taught and not get bogged down in the content.

Task Scaffolding


Another type of instructional scaffolding is referred to as task scaffolding. In this type of scaffolding, a teacher begins by specifying the steps in a task or instructional strategy. He or she then models the steps in the task, verbalizing his or her thought processes for the students. In other words, the teacher thinks aloud and talks through each of the steps he or she is completing. Once students are able to understand the steps in the task or instructional strategy, they practice the task independently. The teacher observes their performance and may coach students who experience problems. Even though students have watched their teacher demonstrate a task, they may not yet actually understand how to perform it independently. For this reason, it is critical for teachers to scaffold by continuing to model the steps or procedures until correct independent performance is achieved.

Material Scaffolding


Material scaffolding involves the use of written prompts or cues to help the students perform a task or use a strategy. This may take the form of cue sheets or guided examples that list the steps necessary to perform a task. Students can use these as a reference, to reduce confusion and frustration. Ideally, the prompts and cues should be phased out over time as students master the steps of the task or strategy.

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