Today’s classrooms showcase a wide range of skills and experience, bringing newness and variety to every day. Despite this variability, teachers must ensure that all students receive the instruction and support they need, often within tight time and resource restraints.
While academic standards set equitable expectations, teachers need tools to help students reach them. Standards alone don’t guarantee strong outcomes. Only when instruction, practice, and assessment are intentionally connected to those expectations will students thrive.
When teachers have the tools to make that connection possible for every learner, students don’t just participate in learning—they master it.
Standards-based learning is an educational approach where student progress is measured against a clearly defined set of standards. By holding all students accountable to the same learning goals, standards-based learning promotes equity.
The standards are a predetermined list of what a student must master in a particular grade or subject. Using standards to inform instruction provides clarity for both teachers and students. Teachers can more easily create their lesson plans around the standards, and students know what is expected of them.
In this approach, teachers typically progress through their curriculum only once students have demonstrated mastery, rather than measuring time spent on instruction. That’s because standards-based learning is driven by student outcomes rather than teacher tasks.
For example, a math standard might say that students must be able to solve linear equations and inequalities. The standard is dependent on the student’s performance, not whether or not the teacher has taught linear equations and inequalities.
This simple reframing is how standards-based learning stands out from traditional classroom instruction.
Traditional instruction lays important groundwork, but today’s educators face persistent challenges that make mastery difficult to achieve.
Even the strongest curriculum can’t meet every student’s needs. Some students grasp new skills quickly and need enrichment to stay engaged. Others require additional scaffolds, background knowledge, or foundational skill reinforcement to access the grade-level content. Differentiation is essential to make sure students don’t slip through the cracks, especially in large classrooms.
While well-intentioned, simply providing practice on grade-level skills doesn’t work for students who lack a solid foundation. Students missing prerequisite knowledge struggle to engage with new content confidently. Without targeted support, these students can fall further behind.
When a curriculum has rigid time limits and fast pacing, educators are held accountable to the calendar, not student needs. As a result, educators may move on to new concepts before students have fully learned the current ones.
Fortunately, educational research points to effective methods for building student learning. Several key practices lead to stronger academic outcomes:
Performance Coach gives teachers the tools and strategies they need to provide effective support while maintaining high expectations for achievement. The supplemental program builds student mastery in ELA and math to help students in grades 3-8 overcome learning obstacles, excel on state tests, and develop lasting academic success.
By pairing explicit instruction with guided and independent practice, Performance Coach makes standards-based learning attainable for every student. Performance Coach offers:
Standards-based learning provides a path to student achievement, but only if teachers and students have what they need to meet those standards successfully. With Performance Coach’s research-based strategies, educators can empower every student to bridge foundational skill gaps and master grade-level standards.
Learn how Performance Coach can help your school make standards-based learning achievable for every student. Connect with an expert.