When you’re in the classroom, teaching can feel like a balancing act. It can be tough to plan lessons that introduce new content in a clear, engaging, and helpful way for each of your students. That’s where differentiated instruction comes in handy! This style of instruction helps you tailor and customize your lessons to your students’ individual learning needs. Browse through this list for a few tips and suggestions to help you get started.

2

Give students different ways to learn the content.

  1. Students may enjoy learning new content in visual, auditory, or hands-on ways. Show your students a video at the beginning of the unit, or let your pupils listen to required readings on tape. You might also use charts, diagrams, or other visual aids to help present the content in a clear, interesting way.[2]
3

Create a variety of different activities for your lesson.

7

Present topics in a problem-based format.

  1. Let your students feel like they’re living in the real world. Not all students get a lot out of traditional, passive lesson plans—instead, they need to really live the material to understand its real purpose. Set up scenarios in your lessons that force students to apply their knowledge in a professional way, which can really take their learning to the next level.[10]
    • Instead of having students answer questions from a French textbook, invite them to translate a section of a French website.
    • You might give your students applied chemistry problems that a professional pharmacist or chemist might deal with.
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8

Set up different stations.

  1. Assign different tasks to different sections of the classroom. Don’t force everyone to do the same assignment at once—instead, breaks the lesson into bite-sized chunks. Assign students to specific stations, so your pupils can work on different types of tasks.[11]
    • You might send advanced students to a more challenging station, while giving struggling students more targeted assignments.
    • In a foreign language class, you might set up stations for reading, speaking, and listening.[12]
    • In a biology class, you might set up different stations that focus on the different stages of mitosis.
9

Design personalized agendas.

  1. Develop a specific, 2-3 week plan for each student. Agendas let you focus on an individual student’s progress, and create a lesson plan that caters to their needs and capabilities. Create a long checklist for each student, giving them a list of tasks each student must finish within 2-3 weeks.[13]
    • Some agendas might be similar, while others might be more advanced or scaled down, depending on the individual needs of the student.
    • In a chemistry class, you might give students a list of labs they need to complete within 2 weeks.
    • In a literature class, you might have assigned readings over a month-long period.
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10

Arrange long-term studies for flexible learning.

  1. Orbital studies are long-term investigative studies into the curriculum. Let students pick a specific topic that they’re interested in, which they’ll focus and research on for 3-6 weeks. Then, work with each student over that time period as they complete a final project, like a presentation or paper.[14]
    • In a history class, you might let your students pick out a specific historical figure to study from a certain time period.
    • You could let your students pick out and read a book from a specific literary time period.
    • In a forensic science class, you might have students study a certain type of forensic evidence, like trace evidence or tire impressions.
11

Design choice boards for your students.

  1. Choice boards let your students pick out their assignments. Set up a row of hanging pockets. Write different assignments on a stack of index cards, and separate the index cards into different pockets. Encourage your students to pick out a card from the choice board, instead of automatically assigning them something to do.[15]
    • You might place cards with different difficulty levels on different rows of your choice board. This way, students could pick out assignments that match their knowledge and skill level.
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Expert Q&A
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  • Question
    How can you meet group instructional needs in the classroom?
    Soren Rosier, PhD
    Soren Rosier, PhD
    PhD in Education Candidate, Stanford University
    Soren Rosier is a PhD candidate at Stanford's Graduate School of Education. He studies how children teach each other and how to train effective peer teachers. Before beginning his PhD, he was a middle school teacher in Oakland, California, and a researcher at SRI International. He received his undergraduate degree from Harvard University in 2010.
    Soren Rosier, PhD
    PhD in Education Candidate, Stanford University
    Expert Answer

    Support wikiHow by unlocking this expert answer.

    Before you assign group work, make sure the problem is challenging enough that it actually requires multiple students to work on it. Otherwise, you'll usually have a few students who sit back and let everyone else do the work.
  • Question
    Does tailoring instruction to learning styles help students learn?
    Soren Rosier, PhD
    Soren Rosier, PhD
    PhD in Education Candidate, Stanford University
    Soren Rosier is a PhD candidate at Stanford's Graduate School of Education. He studies how children teach each other and how to train effective peer teachers. Before beginning his PhD, he was a middle school teacher in Oakland, California, and a researcher at SRI International. He received his undergraduate degree from Harvard University in 2010.
    Soren Rosier, PhD
    PhD in Education Candidate, Stanford University
    Expert Answer

    Support wikiHow by unlocking this expert answer.

    If you try to identify what type of learning style a student has, then teach them with that method, it's going to fall flat. It's a lot more effective to teach all of your students in a variety of different ways, like having a visual representation on the wall, talking about it, then having students explain it in their own words.
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About This Article

Soren Rosier, PhD
Co-authored by:
PhD in Education Candidate, Stanford University
This article was co-authored by Soren Rosier, PhD and by wikiHow staff writer, Janice Tieperman. Soren Rosier is a PhD candidate at Stanford's Graduate School of Education. He studies how children teach each other and how to train effective peer teachers. Before beginning his PhD, he was a middle school teacher in Oakland, California, and a researcher at SRI International. He received his undergraduate degree from Harvard University in 2010. This article has been viewed 107,420 times.
24 votes - 90%
Co-authors: 6
Updated: August 25, 2021
Views: 107,420
Categories: Teaching
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