Learning Support

Learning Support

Definition:
The provision of additional or differentiated educational support to students with identified or suspected learning differences, disabilities, or developmental needs within the school setting. In international schools, learning support is the primary institutional mechanism through which neurodiversity and medical complexity are addressed educationally, encompassing specialist learning support teachers, in-class support assistants, individualized learning plans, assessment accommodations, and coordination with external therapeutic providers. The quality, scope, and philosophy of learning support varies significantly across international schools — from robust neurodiversity-affirming provision to minimal accommodation — making it a critical consideration in school selection for mobile neurodiverse families.

Comparable terms:
SEN/SEND provision (UK/British international school — see SEN/SEND entry; the statutory equivalent) · Special education services (US/North American system — the equivalent framework in US-curriculum schools) · Resource room (US education — a specific provision model; a separate space for additional support) · Learning differences support (education — preferred term in some international schools for its neutral framing) · Educational therapy (education — specialist one-to-one educational support provided by a trained educational therapist)

Sources:
Learning support as a defined term in international schools is documented in school inspection and accreditation frameworks — notably those of CIS (Council of International Schools) and WASC (Western Association of Schools and Colleges) — rather than in dedicated academic literature. The most applicable academic context is: Hayden, M.C. & Thompson, J.J. (2016). International Schools: Current Issues and Future Prospects. Symposium Books, which addresses learning support provision as an area of institutional variation. For the neurodiversity-affirming dimension, see: Armstrong, T. (2012). Neurodiversity in the Classroom: Strength-Based Strategies to Help Students with Special Needs Succeed in School and Life. ASCD.

See also:
SEN/SEND (Education); Inclusive International School (Neurodiversity & Medical Complexity Abroad); Neurodiversity-Affirming Practice (Neurodiversity & Medical Complexity Abroad); BICS/CALP (Language & Identity). Learning support in international schools sits at the intersection of two vocabulary clusters: education and neurodiversity. The BICS/CALP distinction is directly relevant here — learning support staff who do not understand the difference between conversational and academic language proficiency may systematically misidentify recently arrived multilingual children as having learning difficulties when they are in fact navigating a language transition. Conversely, neurodevelopmental needs may be misattributed to the language transition. Effective learning support in internationally mobile contexts requires fluency in both neurodevelopmental and multilingual frameworks simultaneously.



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