“…The demands of individual learning episodes can be too challenging and cognitively effortful for such students; therefore, they fail to acquire critical knowledge and skills necessary to engage with learning tasks and thus fail to make the same rate of progress in learning and academic achievement as their peers (Alloway, 2009;Gathercole & Alloway, 2007). Further, individual differences in performance on working memory tasks exist, particularly across ages (Gathercole & Alloway, 2007, but with high degrees of variability in terms of upper, lower and mean levels of capacity within specific age levels (Alloway, 2006;Gathercole, Lamont, & Alloway, 2006). Alloway and Alloway (2010) clarified that working memory is separate from intelligence, as measured with a large meta-analysis (Ackerman, Beier, & Boyle, 2005), noting that working memory is a specific, independent cognitive structure and one that predicts future learning alongside academic knowledge.…”