Universal Design for Learning

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Universal Design for Learning (UDL) is a teaching approach that gives every student equal access to learning in the classroom. The term “universal” is a bit misleading. While it may sound like UDL classrooms find one pathway that all learners take, this isn't the case. UDL classrooms are all about finding multiple pathways any learner can take. Teachers in UDL classrooms provide options, but more than that, they make sure the options are purposeful. They make learning universally accessible.

So what does UDL look like in the classroom? There are three guiding principles to UDL:

1. Representation

In UDL classrooms, teachers represent information to students in multiple ways. Traditional classrooms (the type you would have seen decades ago) typically used one mode of learning for all students. They would read a textbook or look at a slide, and be expected to learn the material from that one representation. With UDL, students have access to multiple modes of learning at the same time: text-based, video-based, with an audio component, with a hands-on component, etc. Assistive technologies can play a key role in accessibility.

2. Engagement

The way students are engaged in a lesson also needs to be multi-modal. Students can build skills and develop knowledge through games, physical activity, and kinesthetic movement. They can read and annotate. They can collaborate with peers. And when teachers provide choices and take students' backgrounds into account, students are always more likely to engage. These are all examples of diversifying the way in which teachers can engage students.

3. Action and Expression

In addition to varying modes of content and engagement, the way students demonstrate their learning should also be dynamic and choice-based. Instead of every student completing the same task, UDL classrooms provide students with the choice between a 5-page paper, a five-minute oral presentation, or an artistic representation of the material with captions, labels, and descriptions. 

When students are given the academic and environmental supports and options they need to access learning, it’s hard not to be successful.