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Redesigning Teaching, Leadership, and Indigenous Education in the 21st Century
This is one of the three UDL principles. It guides instructors to examine the way they offer material, resources, and content to learners. It encourages faculty to inject optimal flexibility in the design of the ways they present information to the student, in order to cater for learner diversity.
Published in Chapter:
Using Universal Design for Learning to Create Inclusive Provisions for Indigenous Students in Higher Education: Decolonizing Teaching Practices
Frederic Fovet (Thompson Rivers University, Canada)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-7998-5557-6.ch013
Abstract
The decolonization of the curriculum has become a much-discussed process in higher education, and it is particularly pertinent to the inclusion of Indigenous students in the tertiary sector. While the momentum grows for a rapid integration of decolonization of the curriculum into higher education practices, the literature suggests that these efforts so far have tackled content rather than pedagogy itself. Universal design for learning (UDL), on the other hand, appears as a promising framework to support instructors as they engage more deeply with the process of decolonizing pedagogical practices. The chapter explores the phenomenological insights of the author regarding the ways UDL is contributing to this reflection on the inherently Euro-centric nature of classroom practices. The chapter also examined wider repercussions the implementation of UDL to the Indigenous student experience will have on UDL advocacy generally, on higher education reform, and on the future format of support services for this clientele.
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Using Universal Design for Learning (UDL) for Optimal Student Engagement in the Online College Classroom
The third UDL principle which focused on how content is delivered to students.
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Maintaining a Firm Social Justice Lens During a Public Health Crisis: Lessons Learnt From the ‘Learning Pods' Phenomenon
This is one of the three UDL principles. It addresses the dimension of learning and teaching which focuses on providing information to the learner. This principle encourages the teacher to inject as much flexibility as possible into the resources offered to students in order to support all diverse learners.
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Technology, UDL & Literacy Activities for People with Developmental Delays
The UDL practice of presenting the same basic learning materials in more than one medium or manner. This could include text-based presentation coupled with auditory presentation.
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A Model Unit Plan: Teaching Writing to Deaf Neurodiverse Secondary-Aged Students
A principle of UDL where teachers consider how to deliver content to best ensure student understanding.
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Creating Expert Learners in Remote Classrooms: Strategies to Support Executive Functioning Skills
A UDL principle that focuses on instructors presenting the content using a variety of methods.
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Removing the Disability from Distance Education
Presenting course content in a variety of ways to ensure that it is accessible for all learners.
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Universal Design for Learning: Culturally Responsive UDL in Teacher Education
Providing options for learners to perceive and comprehend information (the “what” of learning).
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UDL in Higher Education: A Global Overview of the Landscape and Its Challenges
This is one of the three UDL principles. It encourages faculty to examine the way they offer material, resources, and content to learners, and to inject maximum flexibility from a design lens in the ways they present information to the student, in order to address the needs of all diverse learners.
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