“Scaffolding in education is an instructional method where a
teacher provides temporary support to help students learn new concepts or
skills. As students become more proficient, the teacher gradually reduces
guidance, allowing students to work independently” (Gcu, 2020).
Just like construction workers rely on scaffolds to reach heights
safely, writers need scaffolds to build their writing skills step by step.
Without support, a worker struggles to reach the top of a building — and similarly,
a writer without guidance may find it difficult to develop strong, complete
pieces of writing.
In writing, scaffolding breaks down the writing process into
smaller, manageable tasks, offering guidance at each stage and helping students
progress from guided work to independent writing.
For example, a teacher may model the topic sentence for the
first paragraph, guide students in groups for the second paragraph, and have
students write the third paragraph’s topic sentence independently.
Scaffolding is important for reasons including:
1. Providing
support for developing writers
2. Enhancing
engagement and motivation
3. Facilitating
differentiation to meet students’ diverse needs
4. Promoting critical thinking
References
Gcu. (2020, December 21). What is scaffolding in education and how is it applied? GCU Blog. https://www.gcu.edu/blog/teaching-school-administration/what-scaffolding-in-education-how-applied
Great explanation. Scaffolding is such a helpful way to support and build students’ writing skills step by step.
ReplyDeleteGreat use of imagery to help explain a hard to understand concept.
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