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Differentiation in education can be seen as a means of responding to student diversity in order to meet the vision of a school for all. Differentiation has been widely addressed within a western context, and it appears to be a versatile phenomenon as it occurs under various guises and with a variety of terms and modes of operationalizations. The aim of this configurative review is to investigate how differentiation appears in the international context and to contribute to a much-needed overview of the concept. Analysis of 28 scientific papers representing a broad range of national affiliations resulted in two main findings. First, differentiation is a complex idea that appears to be presented either as differentiating students or differentiating teaching. Four perspectives for approaching differentiation further illustrate the complexity of the phenomenon: differentiation as individualization, differentiation as adaptation to specific groups, differentiation as adaptations within diverse classrooms, and differentiation in a system perspective. Second, the analysis revealed that there are almost no studies transcending the focus on teachers and the classroom by addressing the organizational or system/policy level. This review argues for the benefits that a more system-oriented perspective of differentiation would provide.
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Ingunn Eikeland
University of Stavanger
Stein Erik Ohna
University of Oslo
Nordic Journal of Studies in Educational Policy
University of Stavanger
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Eikeland et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a15d2ae665e751854d114e1 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/20020317.2022.2039351