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Universal Design for Learning (UDL) and Accessibility. Bill Harrison Sr. Instructional Designer Online Studies/Faculty Innovation Center (FIC) Daytona State College. All inclusive education no matter what!. What is UDL?. Roots in UD for physical spaces
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Universal Design for Learning (UDL) and Accessibility Bill Harrison Sr. Instructional Designer Online Studies/Faculty Innovation Center (FIC) Daytona State College All inclusive education no matter what!
What is UDL? • Roots in UD for physical spaces • Ramps, auto doors, door levers, curb cutouts are universally helpful • A research-based set of principles to guide the design of learning environments that are accessible and effective for all. • Based on cognitive neuroscience and identifies three brain networks that are involved in learning: • Affective Network • Recognition Network • Strategic Network • Proactive - design learning experiences that are accessible to ALL learners right from the start, so in many cases, it's not necessary to make accommodations for individual students.
Affective Networks • Help learners answer: • Why should I care about this? • Why should I learn it? • Why is this important to me? • Potential Barriers • Learners don't understand the purpose of the lesson. • The assignment is too easy or too difficult. • The assignment has no value in the learner's life. • Learners may lack executive functions or coping strategies. • Learners may think the content is boring or irrelevant. • Learners may be embarrassed to ask questions. • Learners may have insufficient background knowledge.
Attend to Affective Networks • Recruiting and capturing their interest • Help learners make connections to prior knowledge and experiences. • Share the goal or purpose of the assignment or reading. • Design material so it's relevant to learner needs and interests. • Connect learning to the real world. • Provide detailed directions, examples, rubrics, and options for assignments. • Fostering Self-regulation • Require learners to evaluate their work using the rubric as a guide. • Ask them to assign themselves a grade for each criterion. • Ask them to identify areas of strength and areas they need to improve upon. • Provide students with opportunities to reflect on their learning and their learning processes to see what's working and what isn't. • Sustaining effort and persistence • Provide opportunities for learners to develop their work. • Establish touchpoints so that learners can receive feedback on their work. • Require learners to submit drafts of their work. • Provide developmental feedback and require them to incorporate the feedback into their final submission. • Require learners to conduct peer reviews and use the rubric to provide feedback to one another. • Encourage learners to make and learn from their mistakes.
Recognition Networks • Answer these questions: • What information or skills are we focusing on? • What strategies can I use to help learners make sense of this information? • Potential Barriers for text • Poor vision • Inability to decode text • Poor reading comprehension • Slow reading • Lack of background knowledge • Difficulty understanding the vocabulary • Unfamiliar with the symbols or acronyms being used • Reading level of text is too difficult • Text structure is difficult to follow • Unclear purpose for reading
Recognition Networks • Potential Barriers for lectures and video • Hearing impairment • Attention issues • Poor memory • Lack of background knowledge • Unfamiliar vocabulary or subject matter terms • English as a second language - translation difficulty • Unclear purpose for viewing
Attend to Recognition Networks • Perception • Offer different reading levels and structures and non-text options • Websites • Textbook • Journal or news articles • Audio or video • Image/diagrams • Language, Mathematical Expression, and Symbols • Pre-teach vocabulary • Provide alternative text descriptions for graphic information • Preteach and highlight mathematical expressions or equations • Accompany symbols with text support
Attend to Recognition Networks • Comprehension • Strategies for improving text comprehension include providing: • A purpose for reading • An introduction to establish context • Guided questions to focus learners on important points and concepts • Reading or viewing guides • Graphic organizers for notetaking • E-versions of texts so students can customize according to their preferences • Strategies for readings, lectures, or videos include: • Activating background knowledge • Clarifying misconceptions • Highlighting relationships and critical features • Connecting new ideas to existing understandings • Strategies for vocabulary development include: • Providing new terms ahead of time • Directing learners toward resources like glossaries • Telling learners why it's important to be familiar with discipline specific terms • Creating "check your understanding" quizzes
Strategic Networks • Answer these questions: • How will my learners show me what they have learned? • How will they demonstrate mastery of learning? • Potential Barriers • Traditional Tests • Test anxiety may cause learners to perform poorly. • Skipped questions may cause answers to be tracked incorrectly. • Learners may misunderstand the directions. • Learners may have poor recall of isolated facts, details, or concepts. • Time constraints may cause learners to perform poorly. • Papers or Projects • Learners don't know how/where to begin. • Learners don't know how to organize information. • Learners may not have a clear understanding of the task/grading criteria.
Attend to Strategic Networks • Provide choices • Papers • Tests • Quizzes • Projects • Videos • Presentations • Interviews • Discussions • Graphic Organizers • Drawings • Infographics • Advertisements • Brochures
Attend to Strategic Networks • Provide support • Modeling • Examples • Rubrics • Checklists • Groups • Partners • Discussions • Practice Opportunities • Developmental Feedback • Practice Quizzes
UDL Resources • Center for Applied Special Technology (CAST) (http://www.cast.org/) • UDL Guidelines (http://udlguidelines.cast.org/) • Universal Design For Learning: Theory and Practice • Free PDF book but requires account and login • http://udltheorypractice.cast.org/login
Accessibility – Setting the Stage • Accessibility is about equality • Accommodations are no longer enough • In recent years proponents of the field of disability studies have moved the conversation from the medical model of disability, which views disability as a deficit in the person, to the social model of disability, which views disability as the result of an inaccessible environment.
Accessibility vs Accommodation • Accessibility is proactive • Students DO NOT have to self-identify • Accommodations are reactive • things we do during instruction to meet a specific and unique need of a student that we can’t do ahead of time • Student has registered with disability services
Accessibility – Setting the Stage https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PQGFshzLPXE&feature=youtu.be
Accessibility • Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) of 1990 • https://www.ada.gov/ • Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 • https://www.dol.gov/oasam/regs/statutes/sec504.htm • Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 • https://www.section508.gov/ • Section 508 refresh • https://www.section508.gov/blog/access-board-updates-ict-requirements • References WCAG 2.0 (https://www.w3.org/TR/WCAG20/ )levels A and AA conformance and applies them not only to websites, but also to electronic documents and software.
Accessibility – Document Structure • Page titles • Helps users know where they are • Headings • Use correct heading in correct order, don’t just enlarge text and make bold • Only one heading level 1 (H1) per document • Lists • Correctly mark as list, don’t just type numbers, letters • Links • Identifiable (underlined) and meaningful out of context. NEVER USE “CLICK HERE”
Accessibility – Document Structure • Fonts • Minimize number of fonts • Language • Use as simple language as possible • Color • Do not use color alone to convey meaning • Ensure high contrast ratio • Color Contrast Checker (https://webaim.org/resources/contrastchecker/) • Tables • Captions, row and column headers • Use tab key to check reading order and ensure can navigate by keyboard • Very Important in PowerPoint
Accessibility – Media • Images • Meaning alternative text • Not just a description of image but accurately describes the image's purpose or author's intent in using the image • DO NOT use the phrases "image of ...” or"graphic of ..." to describe the image • Audio • Provide transcript • Video • Provide close caption (CC) and/or transcript • YouTube provides machine CC and transcription but must edit for accuracy
Accessibility – 3rd Party Pubisher Content • External content used in your courses must also be accessible • Check videos for CC or transcript • Use the WebAim Accessibility Checker (https://wave.webaim.org/)to check external webpages • Look for voluntary product accessibility template (VPAT)
Accessibility - Demo time and resources • WebAim (https://webaim.org/) • WCAG 2.0 (https://www.w3.org/TR/WCAG20/) • WAVE HTML Accessibility Checker (https://wave.webaim.org/) • Color Contrast Checker (https://webaim.org/resources/contrastchecker/) • MS Office Accessibility Checker for Windows (https://support.office.com/en-us/article/use-the-accessibility-checker-to-find-accessibility-issues-a16f6de0-2f39-4a2b-8bd8-5ad801426c7f) • MS Office Accessibility Checker for Mac (https://support.office.com/en-us/article/use-the-accessibility-checker-on-your-mac-to-find-and-resolve-accessibility-issues-3b84295e-d55b-49f1-b443-523ec45a5232) • Adobe Acrobat Accessibility (https://helpx.adobe.com/acrobat/using/create-verify-pdf-accessibility.html) • One Page Cheat Sheets (http://ncdae.org/resources/cheatsheets/)
Questions? Any questions? My Contact Info • Bill Harrison • William.harrison@daytonastate,edu • 386.506.4306