Topic 2

Cognitive & Student Differences

Every student brings a unique combination of cognitive, physical, and social traits. A skilled teacher recognises these differences and uses Differentiated Instruction to meet every learner's needs.

A. Types of Student Differences

Cognitive, Physical & Social Differences

Students differ from one another in three broad categories. Teachers must understand and accommodate all three when designing instruction.

TypeWhat it coversExamples in a classroom
Cognitive Mental abilities, thinking styles, memory, processing speed, prior knowledge Some students grasp concepts quickly; others need repetition. Some have exceptional memory; others struggle with recall.
Physical Motor skills, physical abilities, sensory differences (vision, hearing), health conditions A student with poor vision needs different seating. A student with fine motor difficulties may need adapted writing tools.
Social / Emotional Background, family environment, peer relationships, confidence, motivation, emotional regulation A shy student may not participate in group work. A student facing family stress may struggle to concentrate.
Cognitive Differences
CoversThinking, memory, processing speed
ExampleFast vs. slow learners; strong vs. weak recall
Physical Differences
CoversMotor skills, sensory needs, health
ExampleVision/hearing issues, mobility needs
Social / Emotional
CoversBackground, motivation, confidence
ExampleShy students, stress affecting focus

B. Differentiated Instruction

What is Differentiated Instruction?

Differentiated Instruction (DI) is the practice of adapting teaching based on students' diverse learning needs — while ensuring all students work toward the same core learning goals. It is NOT giving different students completely different lessons. All students work on the same concept, but the level, format, or output may vary.

ElementWhat is differentiated?Example
Content What the student learns — the material, topic, or complexity level Advanced students read a more complex text; struggling students use a simplified version
Process How the student learns — activities, strategies, groupings Some students work in groups; others use diagrams; others listen to recordings
Product How students demonstrate learning — the output or assessment type One student writes an essay; another creates a poster; another gives an oral presentation
Content
What?The material / complexity of learning
ExampleSimpler vs. advanced reading materials
Process
What?How students engage with the content
ExampleGroups, diagrams, audio for different students
Product
What?How students show what they learned
ExampleEssay, poster, oral presentation
⚡ MCQ Tip Differentiated Instruction has 3 elements: Content, Process, Product. All students work on the same concept — only the approach differs. This is not the same as individualized education.

C. Bloom's Taxonomy — Cognitive Levels

The 6 Levels of Bloom's Taxonomy (Revised)

Originally created by Benjamin Bloom in 1956, revised by Anderson & Krathwohl in 2001. It classifies cognitive learning into 6 hierarchical levels — from simple recall at the bottom to complex creative thinking at the top.
Memory aid: R-U-A-A-E-C — Remember, Understand, Apply, Analyze, Evaluate, Create.

6
Create
Design, build, compose, plan, produce, invent, formulate
Highest
5
Evaluate
Judge, defend, critique, argue, justify, assess, recommend
HOTS
4
Analyze
Compare, contrast, differentiate, examine, break down, classify
HOTS
3
Apply
Use, solve, demonstrate, execute, implement, operate, carry out
LOTS
2
Understand
Explain, summarize, paraphrase, interpret, classify, describe
LOTS
1
Remember
Recall, define, list, identify, name, recognise, memorise
Lowest
Memory Acronym R → U → A → A → E → C Remember → Understand → Apply → Analyze → Evaluate → Create (lowest to highest)
⚡ MCQ Tip Bloom's was created in 1956 by Benjamin Bloom, revised in 2001 by Anderson & Krathwohl (renamed top level from Synthesis → Create). HOTS = Higher Order Thinking Skills (Analyze, Evaluate, Create). LOTS = Lower Order (Remember, Understand, Apply). SLOs must be based on Bloom's levels.

Quick MCQ Revision

TopicKey Fact
Differentiated Instruction3 elements: Content, Process, Product — all students same concept
Bloom's — Created byBenjamin Bloom (1956), revised by Anderson & Krathwohl (2001)
Bloom's Level 1Remember — define, list, recall, identify
Bloom's Level 2Understand — explain, summarize, describe
Bloom's Level 3Apply — use, solve, demonstrate
Bloom's Level 4Analyze — compare, contrast, classify
Bloom's Level 5Evaluate — judge, critique, assess
Bloom's Level 6Create — design, build, compose (highest level)
HOTSAnalyze, Evaluate, Create (levels 4–6)
LOTSRemember, Understand, Apply (levels 1–3)
Cognitive differencesDifferences in thinking, memory, processing speed
Social differencesBackground, family, peer relationships, confidence
Key