addressing student variability in educational design
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Addressing student variability in
educational designDr. Alan BruceULS Ireland
ODS Summer SchoolMarathon, Greece
15 July 2014
Setting contexts Global change and emergence of new learning
priorities: crisis, power and ownership Transforming educational systems: linkage to quality,
outcomes and employment The Inclusion Imperative: access, equity and innovation Understanding difference: student diversity in a
changed world Policy to best practice – design, integration and
sustainable values Introducing Universal Design for Learning
1. Global change Patterns of constant change Permanent migration mobility Outsourcing Flexible structures and modalities Obsolescence of job norms Knowledge economy Ecological pressures End of certainty
Challenges to the system
Persistence and increase in inequality Permanent hopelessness of excluded Embedded violence and internal underclasses Social polarization Stripping away rights Invisibility, ethnic difference and the retreat
to denial Role of learning
Accelerating inequality
12 m.: numbers with more than $1m. to invest (9,2% increase since 2011)
$46,2 trillion: aggregate wealth of this group (10% increase since 2011)
Ultrarich (>$30m.) surged 11% (now 35,2% of all millionaires)
World Wealth Report: RBC Wealth Management & Capgemini Financial Services (June 2013)
Declining social mobility Rising income inequality reflected in declining
equality of opportunityGlobal Wage Report 2012/13, ILO (Prof. Miles Corak, Journal of Economic Perspectives 2013)
Mainstream: nightmare or opportunity?
Mythology of the ‘normal’ Defining the mainstream: what have we become? Robust probing of social structure required as a
preliminary to defining mainstream Masking power, relationships and inequity Need to avoid cliché and assumptions Learners are immersed in and emerging into this
changed constellation – of which educators may know little
2. Transforming educational systems
Education is both structure and process Aims and goals vary considerably Education systems mirror world, society and
relationship-matrix of which they are part Education systems are as much constraining
as liberating Forum for ideas or market for products? Or both….?
Critical perspectives Traditional schooling in the spotlight Learning systems both reflect and lead
society Information…wisdom…understanding Critical enquiry - back to Illich Reflection and inquisitiveness Engaging with difference
Knowledge in transformation Commodification of knowledge Impact on education systems (Freire, Illich,
Field) Impact on work (Braverman, Haraszti, Davis) Impact on community - alienation and
anomie From community to networking Knowledge and learning now centrally linked
as product and process dimensions
Traditional models Conservative Strict Hierarchic Inflexible Memorization and recall focus Examination-driven Resistant to application of new technologies
Potential models Pupil/learner centered Competence driven Community focused Technologically enhanced International engagement focus Learning process (application modes) Individual value (humanistic approach)
Current realities Disruptive classroom behaviors Absenteeism Early school-leaving Teacher burnout Migration, integration and sustainability Literacy, numeracy, basic skills Languages Quality and governance
DG EAC (2008) European Education and Training Systems in the Second Decennium of the Lisbon Strategy, NESSE and ENEE.
3. The Inclusion ImperativeFive key issues:
1. Measures to reduce early school leaving2. Priority education measures in relation to disadvantaged pupils and groups3. Inclusive education measures in relation to pupils with special needs4. Safe education measures in relation on the reduction of bullying and harassment5. Teacher support measures.
Defining inclusionSocial inclusion can be defined as a number of affirmative actions undertaken in order to reverse the social exclusion of individuals or groups in our society
INCLUSO (EU 7th Framework, 2009)
Defining exclusionA multidimensional process of progressive social rupture, detaching groups and individuals from social relations and institutions and preventing them from full participation in the normal, normatively prescribed activities of the society in which they live.
H. Silver, Social Exclusion: Comparative Analysis of Europe and Middle East Youth , Dec. 2007. (Wolfensohn Center for Development, Dubai)
Probing inclusion Not necessarily benign Not necessarily desired Not necessarily valued Inclusion or conformity? Exclusion often seen minimally as lack of access Exclusion is a systematic policy of inequality and
denial of rights Hugely different implications
Shaping real inclusion
If learning, working and production are controlled inclusion is at best token, at worst sinister
At the core of inclusion must be ability to assess critically and express freely
Fundamental to inclusion is ability to ask questions that challenge existing relations
Inclusion re-examines existing reality while posing viable alternatives
Trajectories of inclusion
Youth and mass unemployment Demographics: ageing and life expectancy Women and labor market participation Immigration, cultural and religious difference Disability Conflict, stress, anomie Urbanization, dissent and democratic deficits
Meaningful inclusion Inclusion changes both sides – the act of
mainstreaming is to change the mainstream not the ‘excluded’
From objects to subjects Narratives of adaptation and discovery From target group to citizen Critical role of teachers Inclusion and the dialectic of rights
4. Understanding difference
Student variability – what does it mean? First there was access – the struggle for
universal education Education as a right not privilege Starting with gender Ending with society
Schooling history Relatively recent – mass public schooling only
in 19th Century Highly segregated:
gender class language religion ability
Catering for all – how and why? Is education a right? Who pays? Setting standards Assessing outcomes Purpose and vision Impact of ICT
Legacies of excluding systems
Legacies of segregated schooling Gender Disability Religion Ability Language Class
Unequal school systems mirror unequal society
Schooling is not separate from wider socio-political environment
5. Universal Design for Learning
Universal Design for Learning is a set of principles for curriculum development that gives all individuals equal opportunities to learn.
UDL provides a blueprint for creating instructional goals, methods, materials and assessments that work for everyone - not a single, one-size-fits-all solution but rather flexible approaches that can be customized and adjusted for individual needs
Universal Design Originally it referred to designing buildings, products and environments that
are accessible to all sections of society including the aged and those with disabilities of all kinds.
The 9 principles: Equitable use
Flexibility in use
Simplicity
Perceptible information
Tolerance for error
Low physical effort
Accessible size and space for approach
A Community of learners
Instructional climate
Design for All (DfA) The name of the European initiative associated with ICT inclusive
products and e-accessibility (Web Accessibility Initiative/WAI)
Design for All (DfA) embraces the idea that it is possible to produce ICT goods, which can be accessed to all potential users without modification, or, at least products should be easy to adapt to different needs, or should use standardized interfaces that can be accessed simply by using assistive technology.
International standardization considers principles of universal design, ISO 20282-1:2006 provides requirements and recommendations for the design easy-to-operate everyday products, taking into consideration design requirements for context of use and user characteristics aiming at ease of operation.
Key focus Universal Design for Learning (UDL) is a framework
that addresses the primary barrier to fostering expert learners within instructional environments: inflexible, “one-size-fits-all” curricula.
Inflexible curricula raise unintentional barriers to learning.
In learning environments individual variability is the norm, not the exception
UDL addresses learner variability by suggesting flexible goals, methods, materials and assessments that empower educators to meet these varied needs.
Universal Design for Learning The universal design concept was transferred to the
education field and applied to the learning process and learning environment, so now termed universal design for learning (UDL)
Universal Design Learning is a framework for learning that includes all students. Being grounded in socio-cultural theory, UDL views learning environments and social interactions as being key elements in development and learning.
The key principles driving UDL include: flexibility, simple and intuitive instruction, multiple
means of presentation, success oriented curriculum, appropriate level of student effort, and appropriate environment for learning.
UDL Curriculum The purpose of UDL curricula is not simply to help
students master a specific body of knowledge or set of skills, but to help them master learning itself— to become expert learners.
Expert learners have developed 3 broad characteristics:
1. strategic, skillful and goal directed2. knowledgeable3. purposeful and motivated to learn more
Components of UDL Curricula
Goals Methods Materials Assessment
Structural framework CAST (Center for Applied Special Technology)
established 1984 First Federal grant from NSF 1994 UDL defined. CAST invents “Bobby” 1995 CAST Advisory Council established 2005 National UDL Taskforce established 2006 First Statutory definition of UDL 2008 National Center for Universal Design established 2009 University of North Carolina academic expertise
UDLnet focus Among first UDL projects in Europe Implement foresight process to map and propose
effective methods to support modernization and development of digital competencies
Review international scientific evidence and educational stakeholders’ views to identify and analyze emerging trends, opportunities and challenges in education and eLearning
Collect, implement and test a series of participatory engagement activities to improve uptake, sharing and reuse of inclusive teaching and learning practices
General objectives To improve classroom practice and raise
awareness of European educational communities on inclusive teaching and learning practices
To improve teachers’ work practice, combining ICT skills with innovations in pedagogy, curriculum, and institutional organization
To redesign, adapt and personalize curricula and instructional methods
To create a learning environment that helps each student develop his or her full potential
Principles At the core of Universal Design for Learning
is the principle of equity and inclusion. UDLnet Best Practice Guidelines for design
and implementation of inclusive resource-based educational activities as a reference to be adopted by educational stakeholders
To develop a detailed and systematic methodology with the view to provide/collect inclusive teaching and learning practices
Challenging times How do we include at a time of crisis and
economic efficiencies? How do we distribute resources equitably? How do we alter minds, prejudices, inherited
bias? How do we extend inclusion in an innovative
manner? Ho do we establish the primacy of
educational vision?
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