1 / 39

Universal Design for Learning: Inclusive and Effective Education for All

Learn about Universal Design for Learning (UDL) and how it provides flexible and engaging learning opportunities for all students in the general education curriculum. Discover UDL principles, examples, and guidelines that promote accessibility and success for diverse learners.

ddonnie
Download Presentation

Universal Design for Learning: Inclusive and Effective Education for All

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. National UDL Task Force

  2. UDL Task Force • More than 30 national education and civil rights organizations • Complete list: www.udl4allstudents.org

  3. The Challenge All students have different learning needs, abilities, and preferences

  4. The Need Provide learning opportunities in the general education curriculum that are: INCLUSIVE and EFFECTIVE FOR ALL

  5. Universal Design for learning “A scientifically valid framework for guiding educational practice” (Source: Higher Education Opportunity Act of 2008)

  6. Universal design for learning… • “provides flexibility in the ways • information is presented • Students respond or demonstrate knowledge and skills • Students are engaged” • (Source: Higher Education Opportunity Act of 2008)

  7. Universal design for learning… • reduces barriers in instruction • provides appropriate accommodations [and] supports … • maintains high achievement expectations • (Source: Higher Education Opportunity Act of 2008)

  8. Civil Rights Legacy – Universal Design Universal Design: Access for everyone! Old design: Some are denied

  9. Universal Design “Consider the needs of the broadest possible range of users from the beginning” -- Ron Mace

  10. Universal design principles • Not an afterthought: Full access is designed from the outset • More cost-effective than retrofitting • More elegant and easy-to-use

  11. Universal design (UD) examples • Ramps and curb cuts • Digital books with text-to-speech • TV and video captioning • Easy-grip tools • Electric doors

  12. Universal design for learning Combines new insights from brain research about the nature of learner differences … … with a century of best practices in progressive education.

  13. Defining UDL • Principles laid down by CAST in the 1990s • Federal support for UDL research, dissemination since 1999 • Defined by federal statute in 2008 Higher Education Opportunity Act

  14. Universal design for learning • Eliminating or reducing barriers to academic success for all students • Valuing diversity in the classroom through proactive design of inclusive curriculum

  15. Why UDL? • Schools are working to improve academic performance; • Today’s classrooms include many diverse learners; • THUS, schools need to find ways to better meet the needs of all students!

  16. UDL offers all students… • More ways to access … • More ways to participate … • More ways to demonstrate learning…

  17. UDL principles in action

  18. What are the UDL Principles? In each area of the curriculum provide varied and flexible options for: • Representing information • Action and expression • Engagement

  19. Multiple Representations of Information Examples • Offer text-to-speech, video, audio, and other multimedia; integrate assistive technologies into learning environment • Provide vocabulary support and background knowledge • Highlight critical features & main ideas

  20. Multiple Means of Action and Expression Examples • Let students show what they know with voice recording, graphic displays, performance, etc. • Provide models of expert performance • Offer executive-function supports such as graphic organizers, outlines, etc.

  21. Multiple Means of Engagement Examples • Vary levels of challenge and support to prevent frustration or boredom • Tie work to real-world examples • Where possible, give choices • Teach self-assessment and reflection

  22. UDL applies to the whole curriculum

  23. Goals Traditional UDL • Learning goals may get skewed by the inflexible ways and means of achieving them. • Learning goals are attained in many individualized ways, by many customized means.

  24. Materials Traditional UDL • Mostly print and everyone gets the same materials. • Few options • Variety of materials, media, and formats to reach learners with diverse abilities, styles, and needs equally well.

  25. Methods Traditional UDL • Teacher-centered (lecture) • Homogeneous grouping • Burden on student to adapt to “get it” • Interactivity • Heterogeneous grouping • Rich supports for understanding, independent learning

  26. Assessment Traditional UDL • Many possible means as long as they measure learning! • Supports instructional improvement • Confuse goals with means • Summative – when it’s too late to adjust instruction!

  27. UDL Guidelines

  28. UDL Guidelines • In-depth guide for practical application • Resource for curriculum developers • Checklists for teachers • Go to www.udlcenter.org

  29. With UDL, more students are… • Engaged in their own education • Learning at greater breadth and depth • Achieving at higher levels • Motivated to continue learning

  30. More educators are… • Teaching effectively in classrooms with diverse student needs • Spending more time on instruction and facilitating learning • Helping ALL learners succeed

  31. Local and state supports for UDL • Local • Evolution of general educator and special educator roles • State • State standards and benchmarks • Curriculum adoption policies • Professional development initiatives

  32. Federal supports for UDL Statutes and regulations • No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB) • Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) • National Instructional Materials Accessibility Standard (NIMAS) • Higher Education Opportunity Act (HEOA)

  33. Higher Education Opportunity Act • Defines UDL • Technical assistance for UDL practice • Infuses K-12 teacher prep with UDL • Report cards by States and IHEs on UDL implementation

  34. Federal investment in UDL US Department of Education • Office of Special Education Programs • Institute for Education Sciences • Office of Postsecondary Education National Science Foundation

  35. UDL informs product development

  36. UDL informs product development

  37. What can you do now? • Apply UDL to your instruction • Demand universally-designed products • Share your UDL resources and lesson plans with others • Advocate curriculum adoption policies that require UDL principles

  38. For More Information • National UDL Task Force www.udl4allstudents.org • CAST www.cast.org • National UDL Center www.udlcenter.org

  39. Fro more information (add your information here)

More Related