TMS3731
ASSIGNMENT 4
DUE DATE: SEPTEMBER 2025
,TMS3731
ASSIGNMENT 4 PORTFOLIO 2025
Portfolio Task 1: Reflective Narrative on Creating Inclusive Social Sciences
Lessons (30 Marks)
This task requires you to reflect on your own experience of designing and
delivering an inclusive Social Sciences lesson during your teaching practice.
Rather than creating a lesson plan, this task asks you to narrate how you
ensured inclusivity, learner participation, and diverse learning needs were
accommodated in your classroom based on the two philosophies you studied
in Learning Units 1.3 and 1.4.
Lesson Context and Philosophical Foundations
I taught a Grade 8 Social Sciences lesson on “The Scramble for Africa and Its Impact”
at a peri-urban township school in KwaZulu-Natal. The class had about 45 learners from
diverse linguistic backgrounds (isiZulu, Sesotho, Afrikaans, English) and varied socio-
economic situations. Several students had additional learning needs for example, one
was diagnosed with dyslexia and another had attention challenges. In planning the
lesson, I focus on humanistic and social constructivist approaches, aiming to make
learning learner-centered, collaborative, and responsive to each child’s needs.
The topic itself was both engaging and sensitive. The CAPS Social Sciences curriculum
encourages learners to ask questions and relate content to their world, so I planned to
connect the historical content to students’ experiences. I began by eliciting learners’
existing knowledge and feelings about colonial history, acknowledging that some had
family stories related to the era. And asking open-ended questions (Who? Why? How?)
and inviting every student to share, I made the lesson relevant and ensured their voices
were heard.
,Inclusive Teaching Strategies
To ensure all learners could participate meaningfully, I integrated multiple inclusive
strategies:
Language and Cultural Support: I provided bilingual glossaries of key terms
(English with isiZulu equivalents) and allowed code-switching during explanations. I
encouraged students to discuss ideas in their home language first and then report
back in English. This linguistic scaffolding helped bridge comprehension gaps and
reflects the humanistic principle of equitable access regardless of language. I also
used culturally familiar examples local place names, everyday contexts to make the
lesson more relatable to the learners’ background.
, Differentiated Content and Materials: I prepared tiered readings and activities at
different difficulty levels. Learners with literacy challenges received simplified texts or
graphic organizers e.g. a fill-in chart on causes and effects), while advanced learners
worked with original textbook excerpts and extension questions. I scaffolded writing
tasks by providing sentence starters and outlines. This differentiation tailoring content
and tasks to each learner’s level ensured that every student could engage in learning
at an appropriate challenge level.
Collaborative Learning Activities: The lesson was structured around small-group
work. Students analyzed sources such as a colonial-era cartoon or an oral testimony)
in mixed-ability teams, with each learner given a role (note-taker, presenter,
illustrator, etc. so that everyone contributed. This peer-assisted format embodies
social constructivism: learners build understanding together through discussion. For
example, during a “think–pair–share” about interpreting a historical poster, one group
member helped translate ideas for a peer, allowing both to learn from each other’s
perspectives.
Multimodal Engagement (UDL in Practice): I use a variety of materials and
activities so that students could engage through different senses. We watched a
short video clip on African history, examined maps of colonial borders, listened to an
audio recording of an African leader’s speech, and created a hands-on timeline
activity. Universal Design for Learning (UDL) principles suggest offering multiple
means of representation and expression; in fact, “presenting information in a variety
of ways ensures that more learners have the opportunity to comprehend”. This
ASSIGNMENT 4
DUE DATE: SEPTEMBER 2025
,TMS3731
ASSIGNMENT 4 PORTFOLIO 2025
Portfolio Task 1: Reflective Narrative on Creating Inclusive Social Sciences
Lessons (30 Marks)
This task requires you to reflect on your own experience of designing and
delivering an inclusive Social Sciences lesson during your teaching practice.
Rather than creating a lesson plan, this task asks you to narrate how you
ensured inclusivity, learner participation, and diverse learning needs were
accommodated in your classroom based on the two philosophies you studied
in Learning Units 1.3 and 1.4.
Lesson Context and Philosophical Foundations
I taught a Grade 8 Social Sciences lesson on “The Scramble for Africa and Its Impact”
at a peri-urban township school in KwaZulu-Natal. The class had about 45 learners from
diverse linguistic backgrounds (isiZulu, Sesotho, Afrikaans, English) and varied socio-
economic situations. Several students had additional learning needs for example, one
was diagnosed with dyslexia and another had attention challenges. In planning the
lesson, I focus on humanistic and social constructivist approaches, aiming to make
learning learner-centered, collaborative, and responsive to each child’s needs.
The topic itself was both engaging and sensitive. The CAPS Social Sciences curriculum
encourages learners to ask questions and relate content to their world, so I planned to
connect the historical content to students’ experiences. I began by eliciting learners’
existing knowledge and feelings about colonial history, acknowledging that some had
family stories related to the era. And asking open-ended questions (Who? Why? How?)
and inviting every student to share, I made the lesson relevant and ensured their voices
were heard.
,Inclusive Teaching Strategies
To ensure all learners could participate meaningfully, I integrated multiple inclusive
strategies:
Language and Cultural Support: I provided bilingual glossaries of key terms
(English with isiZulu equivalents) and allowed code-switching during explanations. I
encouraged students to discuss ideas in their home language first and then report
back in English. This linguistic scaffolding helped bridge comprehension gaps and
reflects the humanistic principle of equitable access regardless of language. I also
used culturally familiar examples local place names, everyday contexts to make the
lesson more relatable to the learners’ background.
, Differentiated Content and Materials: I prepared tiered readings and activities at
different difficulty levels. Learners with literacy challenges received simplified texts or
graphic organizers e.g. a fill-in chart on causes and effects), while advanced learners
worked with original textbook excerpts and extension questions. I scaffolded writing
tasks by providing sentence starters and outlines. This differentiation tailoring content
and tasks to each learner’s level ensured that every student could engage in learning
at an appropriate challenge level.
Collaborative Learning Activities: The lesson was structured around small-group
work. Students analyzed sources such as a colonial-era cartoon or an oral testimony)
in mixed-ability teams, with each learner given a role (note-taker, presenter,
illustrator, etc. so that everyone contributed. This peer-assisted format embodies
social constructivism: learners build understanding together through discussion. For
example, during a “think–pair–share” about interpreting a historical poster, one group
member helped translate ideas for a peer, allowing both to learn from each other’s
perspectives.
Multimodal Engagement (UDL in Practice): I use a variety of materials and
activities so that students could engage through different senses. We watched a
short video clip on African history, examined maps of colonial borders, listened to an
audio recording of an African leader’s speech, and created a hands-on timeline
activity. Universal Design for Learning (UDL) principles suggest offering multiple
means of representation and expression; in fact, “presenting information in a variety
of ways ensures that more learners have the opportunity to comprehend”. This