Accelerate Learning with Scaffolding Event
“The limits of my language are the limits of my mind. All I know is what I have words for.”
- Ludwig Wittgenstein

Date for This Event
- September 30, 2025, at the Learning-Focused Training Center in Asheville, NC
Essential Questions for this event:
- How do you use Scaffolding to address student readiness?
- How do you implement the six principles of Scaffolding?
- How do you increase student success through intentional Scaffolding?

Scaffold Up, Not Down
An important finding in education research is the need to provide students with greater access to grade-level assignments and instruction. However, assigning rigorous content poses a significant instructional challenge for teachers facing the reality of students who are behind grade level and need varying types and levels of support to succeed. “Scaffolding up” attempts to address that need. Instead of simplifying activities and bringing content down to what students can currently do, “scaffolding up” focuses on getting students to master the key practices and concepts in grade-level content, with students able to do so increasingly independently over time.
Why Attend Accelerate Learning with Scaffolding?
As teachers strive to address the unique learning needs of students struggling to succeed on grade level, they often reteach content and skills from previous grades. But, when significant amounts of instructional time and practice are spent on remedial content, students are less likely to receive the instruction they need to meet the demands of their current grade level standards. This is especially true when previously unlearned skills or concepts are taught in isolation instead of as complementary support for current grade level learning expectations. For example, if second graders are struggling with number fluency, a teacher may decide to spend a large portion of their math block addressing this foundational skill. However, this same skill can be reinforced during math instruction that focuses on explicitly teaching repeated addition. The potential struggle point is overcome subtly by “scaffolding up” and addressing number fluency in the context of the current mathematical objective. It can gradually fade as students build their number fluency. This is the foundation for effective scaffolding - to avoid a decrease in learning expectations while building a bridge to a better understanding of a lesson’s grade level learning objectives.
Accelerate Learning with Scaffolding provides schools and teachers with an extensive understanding of the types of Scaffolding Strategies that may be proactively planned and applied when needed to support struggling learners and how to gradually shift the responsibility more fully to the student as their confidence and competence grow during a lesson, unit, or course of study.
Attending Accelerate Learning with Scaffolding training is not just about adopting new teaching methodologies; it's about fostering an environment where all students can thrive academically, engage confidently in their learning journey, and achieve their full potential.

Your Facilitator
Lindsey Hampton
During her 20+years as an educator, Lindsey served various grade levels and subject areas. For 8 years she led inclusive classrooms and taught advanced placement courses. Following her classroom years, Lindsey spent 10 years as an instructional coach, professional development specialist, and district administrator of new teacher induction. She has presented at numerous conferences, including the Florida Association of School Administrator Conference, the Tennessee Principals Association Conference, and the Kentucky Association of School Administrators. Today, she works directly with teachers and school leaders in the implementation of the Learning-Focused Instructional Framework.
Learning Goals

You Will Be Able To...
- Describe the Acceleration Intervention Focus Model
- Explain the role of scaffolding in Tier 2 instruction
- Determine appropriate scaffolds for a variety of struggle points in a lesson
- Proactively plan scaffolding that is subtle but impactful in supporting grade level instruction
- Determine how to fade scaffolding as students build independence in new skills and content knowledge
You Will Know...
- Principles of scaffolding, including the zone of proximal development, students’ status of being, and maintaining grade level appropriate learning expectations
- Scaffolding Strategies for supporting content acquisition, thinking processes, assignment application, and organization of the learning environment
- Process for planning scaffolding during lesson instruction
- Criteria for appropriately fading scaffolding when no longer needed
What You Will Receive
Along with attending a workshop led by a Learning-Focused expert, participants will also receive the following resources and materials:
- Accelerate Learning with Scaffolding Book
- Accelerate Learning with Scaffolding Flip Card
- 12 month Learning-Focused Online membership

When and Where
At Learning-Focused Training Center
Location
- 200 District Dr. Ste 001, Asheville, NC 28803
Date
- September 30, 2025
Time
- 8:30 AM - 3:30 PM
Our training center is designed for intimate training, with only 22 spots available. We aim to provide a wonderful learning experience to help you grow your network through collaboration.

Registration
Act fast, only 22 spots are available
- Registration for Accelerating Learning with Scaffolding is $197 per person.
- Registration includes snacks, drinks, coffee, and other goodies.
- Learning is better in teams! Register three people and receive a $50 discount off the third registration fee!
- Participants are accepted on a first-come, first-served basis only. To secure your spot, we must receive a signed quote.