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Universal Design for Learning

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Universal design for learning (UDL) is a tool for equity that helps to actualize:

  • The variety of assets all students bring with them to school are seen, valued, and accessed as teachers design and implement meaningful, relevant lessons.

  • All students become expert learners by engaging in learning that is designed to remove barriers and center their strength, value their identity, and foster a sense of belonging.

 Join the San Diego UDL Network for Educators

Cracks in the Foundation

David Rose, along with colleagues Jenna W. Gravel and Nicole Tucker-Smith share their reflections on the past and future of UDL. Written in 2021, this article shares some of the rationale for updating the UDL guidelines to version 3.0 and the need to center issues of equity and identity explicitly.

What is UDL?

UDL is a framework to improve and optimize teaching and learning for all people, and aims to change the design of the environment rather than to change the learner. When environments are intentionally designed to reduce barriers, all learners can engage in rigorous, meaningful learning. Universal design for learning:

  • Acknowledges our students have variability and then promotes designing instruction that leverages that variability
  • Designs to increase educational equity from the start by removing barriers

  • Teaches to the spectrum of learners

  • Is a mindset (all can succeed) and the skillset (of removing barriers) to make it happen

Introduction to UDL Video Resources

MORE TO EXPLORE


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Contact

Audrey Mendivil
District Advisor, Curriculum and Instruction, Mathematics
Learning and Leadership Services
audrey.mendivil@sdcoe.net
858-295-8886