Universal Design for Learning:

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
What are your assumptions … Goals of Instruction Students of Today Curriculum Learning Universal Design for Learning What informs your assumption (e.g.
Advertisements

© CAST 2011 Universal Design for Learning: A Paradigm Shift.
Universal Design for Learning: A Framework for Teaching All Learners August Wakefield, MA.
KAGE Conference Feb 22, 2008 Universal Design for Learning: An Educational Environment for ALL Students Linnie Lee Assistive Technology Consultant Kentucky.
Universal Design for Learning: Presenter’s Academy
UDL Institute West Contra Costa Unified School District Day 1: UDL Overview Presented by Kavita Rao February 25, 2015.
Universal Design for Learning Creating a Learning Environment for ALL Students! Presenters: Michelle Arneson & George Van Horn.
UDL: Addressing the Variability of All Learners Grace Meo and Allison Posey CAST.
Universal Design for Learning (UDL)
© CAST 2011 UDL: Addressing the Variability of All Learners CAST
Consider This: Best Practice to Inform Our Planning The Next Chapter Session 4 Barb Mick - COOR ISD Jackie Fry - COP ESD.
Improving Educational Participation and Outcomes for ALL Students with Universal Design for Learning and–for some–Special Education Services Joy Smiley.
Reflective practice Session 4 – Working together.
Universal Design for Learning Presented by Katherine Benefield & Sissy Markum Opening In-service August 2008.
Nick Zomer Dean Rusk Middle School
Support for Students with Diverse Learning Needs
Universal Design of Learning Hamilton Elementary Erica Wylie January 27, 2010.
Meeting Arizona College and Career Ready Standards for Special Educators March 23 rd & 24 th Day 2 Presenters: Debra Herburger Kevin Schaefer
Universal Design for Learning
Welcome Back! Session 7 Revere Wed, Sept 25 Allison Posey.
Wednesday, March 25, 2014 Universal Design for Learning: A Framework for Teaching All Learners 1CAST 2014.
Access no password Go to for-ma-educators-wakefield (address is on your agenda)
To understand the UDL Guidelines To consider applications to practice Afternoon Goals:
Welcome back! Weymouth-UDL Monday, June 17, 2013.
Universal Design for Learning: A Framework for Teaching All Learners May 9, 2014 | #UDL (C) CAST
Universal Design for Learning: A Framework for Teaching All Learners August CAST: Wakefield, MA.
Tiffany Harrell “The goal for every student is to learn, but not every child learns in the same way.” (Firchow, 2011)
Delbert Heistand Morris Schott Middle School. WHAT IS UNIVERSAL DESIGN? The design of products and environments to be usable by all people, to the greatest.
Resourceful Ideas Thomas McDaniel Walden University Sherry Lambertson Reaching and Engaging All Learners Through Technology, EDUC-6714 D-2 November 28.
Universal Design for Learning: A Framework for Teaching All Learners August , 2013 Everett, MA.
Welcome! Universal Design for Learning: A Framework for Teaching All Learners June 27-28, 2013 Framingham, MA.
Universal Design for Learning: Monday, April 28, 2014 BPS A Framework for Teaching All Learners | #UDL (C) CAST 2014.
Universal Design for Learning: A Framework for Teaching All Learners May Wakefield, | #UDL (C) CAST
Universal Design for Learning: A Framework for Teaching All Learners November 20 – 22, 2013 Grace Meo and George Van Horn (C) CAST 2013.
Universal Design for Learning: November Wakefield, MA A Framework for Teaching All Learners 1(C) CAST 2013.
Welcome to CAST! Universal Design for Learning: A Framework for Teaching All Learners May 21-22, 2013 San Diego.
UDL: Addressing the Variability of Learners in Today’s Classrooms
National UDL Task Force. UDL Task Force More than 30 national education and civil rights organizations Complete list:
Universal Design for Learning: A Framework for Teaching All Learners August Wakefield, MA.
Universal Design for Learning: A Framework for Teaching All Learners DATE | #UDL (C) CAST
Go to at-cast (address is on your agenda) at-cast Two Steps: 1.Sign.
Universal Design for Learning: Friday, Oct 25, 2013 Wakefield, MA A Framework for Teaching All Learners 1CAST Wakefield 10/5-10/6/2013.
UDL in Revere Nov 5, CAST Wakefield 10/5-10/6/2013.
Universal Design for Learning Creating Curb Cuts Creating Curb Cuts.
UDL & DIFFERENTIATION BY: KYEONSHAE’ RICHARDSON THURSDAY MAY 12, 2016 EDU673: INSTRUCT. STRAT. FOR DIFFERENTIATED TEACH & LEARN.
Jeff McCoy, Executive Director of Academic Innovation and Technology
UDL & DIFFERENTIATION Cynthia Eason EDU 673 Instruction, Strategy for Differentiated Teaching & Learning.
UNPACKING ELEMENTARY ELA TEKS
W080: Students Have a Say with Seesaw
Differentiating Disciples: Maximizing the Learning of All Students
Lesson 7: How Documentation Can Extend the Learning
Meeting the needs of all students
Mathematics and Special Education Leadership Protocols
Differentiation in the 21st Century
4G3 – Global Change Access to Food.
Exploring Universal Design for Learning Meeting the Needs 2016
SOCIAL MEDIA MARKETING
Universal Design for Learning:
Building Community within the Mathematics Classroom
The myth of average Runs for 18 minutes
Universal Design for Learning:
WELCOME TO HAMILTON COUNTY’S PROFESSIONAL LEARNING FOR THE SCHOOL YEAR Please get your cell phones out and text _____________ to _______________.
UDL Academy Session 7 Cohort 1
Gaining Ground with Universal Design for Learning
Science Leaders Network Meeting
Connecticut Core Standards for Mathematics
A free, world class education for anyone, anywhere
The Inclusive Classroom
Differentiated Instruction & Universal Design for Learning
DIFFERENTIATED INSTRUCTION USING ASSESSMENT EFFECTIVELY.
Presentation transcript:

Universal Design for Learning: A Framework for Teaching All Learners Please fill out a name tent, permissions, and try to connect to UDL Connect (our online resources for today). The permissions sheet is helpful as we try to ‘tweet’ and use images for our CAST social media site. If you do not want to be in a photo, please remind us. Thank you! We will include ‘diving deeper’ notes in this section of the Power Point. Blackboard image from simplyjaki.com Thursday, January 16, 2014 Fairhaven, MA CAST 2014

Introductions Allison Posey aposey@cast.org You can also introduce yourselves on our UDL Connect site. Allison Posey aposey@cast.org CAST 2014

Love the wintery weather: Love it! Play in it, ice skate, ski… Tolerate it! I like it for the season, but love when it leaves… Hate it! I wish we could fly south for the winter… CAST 2014

Already have plans for February vacation? Yes! I booked my tickets months ago… Maybe! I decide the week before… No! I am staying home, resting, and organizing… CAST 2014

Commute less than… 5 minutes, I can walk… 5-20 minutes, enough to listen to a few songs… Over 20 minutes, on a good day… CAST 2014

Have fond memories of school? I loved school… I could take it or leave it… I couldn’t wait to leave! CAST 2014

Turn and share: what breakfast best describes you at this moment? CAST 2014

Presentation Goals Build introductory background To explore (brief tour!) how UDL addresses challenges of learner variability To meet these goals, we will provide multiple means of representing content, of being able to act with the content, and to engage with the objectives. (we will model UDL!) Knowing how people learn  can purposefully design learning environments CAST 2014

This session: explore Analogy! This workshop is like your first visit with a travel guide… with this visit, the travel guides will tell you about UDL & a journey you might want to take. At this point, you are not signed up to take the the ‘real’ trip yet! You are just building your background. Implementation of UDL is a process of change that can take years (even up to to 7 years!) to integrate at the classroom, school, and district level. The phases are recursive and can be revisited many times with growing understanding of UDL. For more information on UDL Implementation, visit the following site: UDL Implementation, A Tale of 4 Districts: http://www.udlcenter.org/implementation/fourdistricts The goal of this workshop is to Explore UDL. CAST 2014

Quiet reflection What are your goals for today Quiet reflection What are your goals for today? (write, draw, tweet, type…) For this workshop For your professional learning Pause for a moment to consider why you signed up for this workshop. What are your personal and professional goals? You can write, draw, record, build (etc!) your goals and we will revisit these throughout the 2 days. CAST 2014

Tweet: #UDL1day CAST social media UDL Center AIM Center Do a search for our three organizations on your favorite social media sites! PLEASE NOTE: The #UDL hashtag is just an example – choose whatever hashtag you want for the workshop you’re doing. If you do not wish to have a workshop-specific hashtag, please leave the reminder about using the #UDL hashtag in case people decide they want to tweet. There are too many to list on the slide, it’s easier for people to just do a search for the three organizations. They’re easy enough to find on the four sites listed above (Twitter, Facebook, Google+ and YouTube). However, if people have trouble finding the sites, I’ve included the direct links below: Connect with CAST: CAST on Twitter: https://twitter.com/cast_udl CAST on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/CenterforAppliedSpecialTechnology CAST on Google+: http://goo.gl/3q7Om CAST on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/user/UDLCAST Connect with the National Center on Universal Design for Learning: UDL Center on Twitter: https://twitter.com/udl_center UDL Center on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/UDLCenter UDL Center on Google+: http://goo.gl/poBrj UDL Center on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/user/UDLCenter UDL Connect Ning: http://community.udlcenter.org/ Connect with the National Center on Accessible Instructional Materials: AIM Center on Twitter: https://twitter.com/aim_center AIM Center on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AIMCenter AIM Center on Google+: http://goo.gl/JYjlM AIM Center on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/user/AIMNationalCenter Use Twitter? Use #UDL1day in your tweets during the workshop! #UDLchat: 1st & 3rd Wednesdays of the month, 9-9:30pm ET CAST 2013

Scenario #1: What is your preference? North: acting, ‘let’s do it’, plunge in South: caring, consider everyone’s feelings & before acting East: going with your gut, look at big picture West: paying attention to detail: the who, what, when, where, why before acting CAST 2014

Discuss & Share (4 min): What are the strengths to this ‘style’? What are the limitations of this ‘style’? What value do the other ‘styles’ add? http://www.online-stopwatch.com/world-games-running/ CAST 2014

Problems with this activity Does not consider the variability, the entire spectrum Does not consider the context Does not consider the goal! CAST 2014

Scenario #2: Context matters What ‘style’ are you when… you are in the grocery store planning a large holiday dinner for your family/friends? CAST 2014

Scenario #3: Context matters What ‘style’ are you when… you are in a leadership meeting deciding on new curriculum for the department(s)? CAST 2014

Notice the Variability Range of preferences… depending on the context CAST 2014

Goal matters Grocery store scenario: Leadership meeting @ curriculum: You want everyone to be able to eat a well balanced meal You want to buy all organic food from a local farm You don’t want to spend more than $50… Leadership meeting @ curriculum: You have limited money for new materials You don’t have time to train staff You already have 2 new initiatives… CAST 2014

Return to seat  CAST 2014

Old view of learning: learning ‘styles’ CAST 2014

‘Styles…’ ‘right-left’ brained ‘visual, spatial, kinesthetic, auditory… learner’ ‘Extrovert/introvert’ CAST 2014

However the ‘styles’ do not consider Context Goal Variability- range we know exists R-L brain sample quiz question: ‘I wear a watch’ ‘I keep a journal’ ‘I hate following directions’… CAST 2014

Old view of learning: ‘average’ Image from: http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://expressiveepicurean.files.wordpress.com/2010/01/iq_bell_curve.gif&imgrefurl=http://expressiveepicurean.wordpress.com/2010/01/21/the-curse-of-being-average/&h=303&w=591&sz=9&tbnid=_BQZXoSODKNsZM:&tbnh=90&tbnw=176&zoom=1&usg=__NN5tQaNAPhqpKGCMJGWKt9jVQ2s=&docid=-0FtEZqpcyN-2M&sa=X&ei=TjplUqP1G_b-4AOZpICAAQ&ved=0CEMQ9QEwAw CAST 2014

New understanding: Variability For example, these three functional magnetic resonance images (fMRI) are an example of individual variability. They show brain activity patterns of three different people performing the same simple, finger tapping task. The level of brain activity during performance of this task is designated using color. As you can see, each of these three individuals shows a unique pattern of brain activation. For more information on fMRI, visit Neuroscience for Kids: http://faculty.washington.edu/chudler/image.html Image credit: Teaching Every Student in the Digital Age: Universal Design for Learning (Permission granted) CAST 2014

New imaging: variability in connections CAST 2014

Variability: the goal matters! CAST 2014

Context matters Reflect on your practice: how does a student in one class look different when in a different context (ie: on the stage, during lunch, with their parents…) Examples include: Baby in water: the step reflex they do not have on land returns when in the context of water! Tale of 2 mice: these mice are identical twins! Based on their diet, environment, they are now very different: even their DNA is different! For more information, visit (video included): http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/body/epigenetics.html A fun, elementary age book related is: Fish is Fish book, by Lionni (1970) where fish – who cannot explore land– talks with a frog who has been on land. As the frog describes things on land, the fish constructs new knowledge based on their own current knowledge! CAST 2014

Context matters CAST 2014

dynamic interaction between New understanding: Learning occurs at the dynamic interaction between learner (variability) & environment (context) towards the goal CAST 2014

Variability, Context, & Goal matter. What resonates? Video: Link (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8WClnVjCEVM) to the you tube video, Variability Matters (10:12 minutes) Todd Rose, from CAST presented at the Cyberlearning Research Summit on January 18, 2012. As you watch: what resonates? What new ideas were inspired? What applications can be made to practice? To watch another video (16 min) that explores Variability, watch David Rose and Todd Rose (they are not related!): http://udlseries.udlcenter.org/presentations/learner_variability.html?plist=explore CAST 2014

Elbow buddy discussion Share a key take-away: what resonated? Discuss how either the Rubik cube or running shoes demonstrates the importance of variability & context? How would you design a ‘universal’ Rubiks Cube? Think about Todd’s argument: The design of Rubik cube & options for strategy lead to engagement and mastery. What happens when we design for the ‘average’? (shoes, for example) CAST 2014

Universal Cube This cube accounts for variability: -color-coded -textured -shapes Universal tool -Everyone can use it -regardless of needs or preferences CAST 2014

Break CAST 2014

Started ‘in the margins’ Building Background: Started ‘in the margins’ CAST began as a small group of neuropsychologists in the early 1980s. Based on the medical model of diagnosing individuals with ‘problems’ of learning, the initial team was ‘dissatisfied’ with their recommendations which did not seem to support the student once he/she left the clinic. They found that many of their design modifications, recommended for one student, could benefit others in the classroom as well. Initial work was to take advantage of emerging technologies that could help a student with disability overcome barriers in the environment. For example, a word processor could help a student who struggled with the fine motor skills needed to write with a pen. “We believed that digital tools could offer the flexibility that could be powerful levers for students who most needed better leverage—students with disabilities.” © 1986 CAST, Inc. CAST 2014

Inspired by Universal Design … “all new environments and products, to the greatest extent possible, should be usable by everyone regardless of their age, ability, or circumstance.” Goal for this session: to understand how UD informed UDL in thinking about design, barriers, and goals. What are some of the barriers to ‘typical’ design? CAST 2014

What is the goal? What are barriers in the design for individuals to reach the goal? Identify the goal: Identify barriers that prevent access to the building. Extend the possible barriers to individuals without the obvious disabilities, e.g. someone pushing a baby carriage will have difficulty with access; someone with a dolly will have trouble bringing packages into the building, someone for whom English is not their primary language will not be able to read the “Post Office” sign over the doorway. Think about design, recognizing that variability is the ‘rule’ and make the design available for everyone. CAST 2014

You can design to access, proactive planning helps Retrofits are often ‘ugly’ and expensive… and often do not work very well! CAST 2014

Design from beginning to reduce barriers so all can reach the goal This shows the elevator in the Louvre (Paris, France). It is beautifully designed and is easily accessible for all (and is in the same location as the stairwell!) CAST 2014

Choose one & discuss: What is the goal. What barriers are reduced Choose one & discuss: What is the goal? What barriers are reduced? How do all benefit from design? Ramps Curb Cuts Electric Doors Captions on Television Easy Grip Tools… It is now expected that the physical environment is designed to accommodate the broadest range of users from the start. What are other examples of ways we have reduced barriers for physical accessibility? CAST 2014

UD Assumptions Not one size fits all – but alternatives for everyone. Not added on later – but designed from the beginning. Not access for some – but access for everyone. How does this challenge what you thought about learning? What are your assumptions about learning? CAST 2014

UDL Curriculum: ‘cognitive’ accessibility Goal. Barriers UDL Curriculum: ‘cognitive’ accessibility Goal? Barriers? Design (context)? Variability? Make available for all The goal of UDL is to take the theory of UD and apply it to learning environments. Thinking about the goals, barriers, and design of lessons, units, homework, etc. CAST 2014

UDL Guidelines CAST 2014

Goal of learning: Expert learners Resourceful, knowledgeable Strategic, goal directed Purposeful, motivated Think of something you are an ‘expert’ at doing. CAST 2014

Questions, Reflections? CAST 2014

Locate UDL Guidelines To ‘do’ UDL: Identify the goal Address variability: design options in the environment Recognition Action Expression Align the assessment to the goal CAST 2014

Example: Goal: to have students learn the stages of cell division Address variability: Options for representation Options for action Options for engagement Assess: can students demonstrate knowledge of the stages of cell division? CAST 2014

Add pictures CAST 2014

Your turn! Practice ‘doing’ UDL Identify the goal Identify barriers in the learning experience Re-design the context: UDL Guidelines to address variability Options for representation Options for action Options for engagement Assessment? CAST 2014

Discuss ideas: Goal? Barriers? Design for variability (UDL Guidelines) CAST 2014

Your redesign ideas: UDL Guidelines CAST 2014

A mindset for designing learning experiences UDL… A mindset for designing learning experiences all individuals can gain knowledge, skills, and enthusiasm for learning reduces barriers to the curriculum while maintaining high goals for all This is the beginning of the concept that UDL is a framework for designing curriculum. The idea is that we want to enable all learners to gain knowledge, skills, and enthusiasm for learning through the design of learning experiences. (‘UDL shifts the focus away from differentiating a text ‘down’ to providing access ‘up’, educator from Harvard Institute, 2013) We do not view UDL as another initiative, but rather a framework for thinking about and aligning other initiatives. CAST 2014

UDL… Change the curriculum (context), not the student Clear goal, flexible means This is the beginning of the concept that UDL is a framework for designing curriculum. The idea is that we want to enable all learners to gain knowledge, skills, and enthusiasm for learning through the design of learning experiences. (‘UDL shifts the focus away from differentiating a text ‘down’ to providing access ‘up’, educator from Harvard Institute, 2013) We do not view UDL as another initiative, but rather a framework for thinking about and aligning other initiatives. CAST 2014

Reflection How does UDL align with your professional practice? What are ‘next steps’ from topics today? How did information tie to your goals? CAST 2014

UDL Connect: http://community. udlcenter UDL Connect: http://community.udlcenter.org/ For Online Resources & discussions http://community.udlcenter.org/ This is a free site that can be used during the workshop and indefinitely after the workshop to build online resources, tools, links and discussions. Be sure to (1) Sign in to UDL Connect (the entire UDL Community) and (2) join our group (unique materials and discussions for this particular workshop. You may also explore and join other UDL Connect sites that are of interest to you. CAST 2014

1. Sign up for the site 2. Join our group: UDL in Fairhaven, MA CAST 2014

I used to think… now I think… CAST 2014

CAST 2014