A Competency-Based Approach to Organizing Differentiated Instruction: Criteria for Leveling Learning Outcomes
Abstract
Differentiated instruction is widely promoted as a response to learner diversity, yet in practice it is often implemented as an informal division of pupils into “strong” and “weak” groups, with tasks varying mainly in quantity rather than in cognitive and communicative demand. Such approaches can undermine equity, reduce academic rigor, and fail to provide transparent pathways for growth. A competency-based approach offers a principled alternative because it defines learning in terms of observable performance, clear criteria, and progressive levels of mastery that are independent of students’ fixed labels. The study synthesizes didactic theory, mastery learning, outcome-based education, and formative assessment research, then proposes a set of criteria for leveling outcomes that can be applied across subjects, with particular relevance for language and literacy education. The results present a coherent model that connects competency descriptors, performance indicators, evidence requirements, and rubric-based criteria into a cycle of diagnosis, planning, instruction, feedback, and progression decisions. The discussion argues that competency-based leveling makes differentiation more ethical and manageable by shifting the focus from student categories to task demands and support needs, enabling flexible grouping and growth-oriented assessment. The article concludes with implications for curriculum design, teacher practice, and quality assurance in schools implementing differentiated instruction.