“…Bemprechat (1992) has proposed that at-risk students, in particular, need educational scaffolding because they may be less likely to receive academic socialization from their home environments. While the importance of scaffolding math instruction for at-risk students is well established in the preschool and grade school literature (e.g., Clements & Sarama, 2008;Fuligni, Howes, Huang, Hong, & Lara-Cinisomo, 2012;Starkey, Klein, & Wakeley, 2004), Wass, Harland, and Mercer (2011) argued that teaching practices that scaffold instruction should be more widely applied to college settings. In our study, we use the concept of scaffolding to better understand the changes to math course pathways and instruction for at-risk developmental students in community college settings.…”