skip the i-GuideIllinois State UniversityAdmissions at Illinois StateAcademics at Illinois StateEvents at Illinois StateMap of Illinois StateIllinois State A to Z ListingIllinois State University Accessibility Information
Center for Teaching, Learning & Technology
CTLT Home >> Resources >> Teaching Topics >> Teaching & Learning Styles >> Supporting Individual Learners in Classrooms with Diversity

Supporting Individual Learners in Classrooms with Diversity

Kathleen McKinney, Cross Chair in the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, and Professor of Sociology
Illinois State University

What follows is a list of strategies, organized into several categories, to help individual students maximize their learning given diverse demographics, backgrounds, needs, and learning styles.*

Knowing Your Students and Providing Individual Opportunities

  • hold instructor meetings (live and virtual) with individual students
  • encourage serious self-reflection on learning by individual students (e.g., have them keep journals on learning, use one-minute papers frequently that ask about how they learn...)
  • involve students in collaborative work grouping them homogeneously by background knowledge and work pace to "individualize" the groups
  • have part of the course requirements via individual learning contracts
  • give a first day survey on "who are your students"
  • give a pre-test to assess students' beginning knowledge of the subject
  • encourage appropriate causal attributions for academic work by individual students
  • provide frequent, meaningful, individualized formative feedback

Diversity in Design, Structure, and Strategies of the Course

  • use several and diverse forms of evaluation/grading (oral exams, take-home exams, essay exams, portfolios, projects, group work, journals, group quizzes, performances, presentations, creative writing, poster sessions, etc. etc.)
  • give your students an inventory of learning styles and adjust the class to who they are or provide more options based on the diversity of styles
  • give students background knowledge tests (pretests) and adjust material or provide alternative learning sequences
  • use multimedia (broadly defined!) - text, audio, video, overheads, computers, discussion, group work, lecture, poetry, art, touch...to present and learn material
  • present verbal material in more than one way and use multiple examples
  • make use of technology as another mode of learning and for asynchronous learning
  • recommend or require diverse out-of-class learning opportunities (co-curricular, extra-curricular, campus culture)

Offer Students Control and Choice

  • give students options and choices in planning the course, in assignments, in ways to demonstrate their learning, and in how they are evaluated
  • allow students to pursue their own questions and interests whenever possible (in discussion, on projects, for paper topics...)

Other Strategies to Support Learning

  • use peers to offer support and feedback
  • value and give credit to students' contributions
  • use assignments that are broken into stages
  • allow pre-drafts of work for formative assessment
  • use midterm course evaluations
  • give a detailed syllabus
  • do not grade competitively
  • do not grade based on a normal distribution
  • don't focus on what you, the teacher, need to cover but on what your students actually learn (less is more)
  • use/recommend relevant campus resources (e.g., learning centers)

*These suggestions came from a panel session at the March 1999 National Meetings of the American Association of Higher Education and/or from my own teaching experience. They have been paraphrased and organized.