This post is for ESL Literacy teachers who use routines but still feel unsure about how much support to give learners within those routines.
The answer is simple:
👉 Routines make scaffolding possible.
Why Scaffolding Without Routines Doesn’t Work
Scaffolding requires learners to:
- recognize task formats
- understand expectations
- focus on new language or skills
Without routines, learners are constantly trying to figure out:
- what they’re supposed to do
- what comes next
- how to participate
That leaves little energy for learning.
Routines free up mental space — so scaffolding can actually help.
How Routines Prepare Learners for Support
When routines are consistent:
- learners know the steps
- learners expect modeling
- learners accept repetition
- learners feel safe trying
This allows you to scaffold intentionally, not reactively.
Classroom Example: Same Routine, Different Support
Week 1 (Heavy Scaffolding)
- teacher models everything
- choral repetition
- visuals for every word
- tracing before copying
Week 2 (Adjusted Scaffolding)
- teacher models once
- learners repeat independently
- fewer visuals
- copying without tracing
The routine stays the same.
The support changes.
That’s effective scaffolding.
Why Literacy Learners Thrive in Familiar Structures
Familiar routines allow learners to:
- notice patterns in language
- anticipate expectations
- build confidence
- take small risks
Without routine, even strong scaffolds can feel overwhelming.
PBLA Connection: Routine-Based Scaffolding
PBLA works best when:
- tasks are familiar
- language is predictable
- conditions are consistent
Routine-based scaffolding allows you to:
- compare performance over time
- notice growth clearly
- collect stronger evidence
Assessment becomes clearer when learning conditions stay stable.
One Simple Planning Tool
Before teaching, ask yourself:
- What part of this lesson is routine?
- What part is new?
- Where do learners need support?
This keeps scaffolding purposeful instead of accidental.
A Teacher Reminder
Routines are not boring.
Scaffolding is not hand-holding.
Together, they create:
- access
- confidence
- growth
And most importantly — dignity.
What’s Coming Tomorrow
Tomorrow’s post will define scaffolding clearly — what it is, what it is not, and how to use it well at CLB 1L.