Universal Design for Learning: Is It Gaining Momentum in Irish Education?

Responding to student diversity has become a key policy priority in education systems around the world. In addition to international and national institutional policies, major changes are underway in instructional practices and pedagogy in many national contexts. Universal Design for Learning (UDL)...

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Main Authors: Margaret Flood, Joanne Banks
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-07-01
Series:Education Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7102/11/7/341
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spelling doaj-25264f1f0aeb4b28b1e90985f1b23d0b2021-07-23T13:37:48ZengMDPI AGEducation Sciences2227-71022021-07-011134134110.3390/educsci11070341Universal Design for Learning: Is It Gaining Momentum in Irish Education?Margaret Flood0Joanne Banks1National Council for Curriculum and Assessment Ireland, D02 KH36 Dublin, IrelandSchool of Education, Trinity College Dublin, D02 PN40 Dublin, IrelandResponding to student diversity has become a key policy priority in education systems around the world. In addition to international and national institutional policies, major changes are underway in instructional practices and pedagogy in many national contexts. Universal Design for Learning (UDL) has become a key pedagogical approach used in education systems which seek to promote inclusive and equitable education in response to student diversity. Despite Ireland’s policy commitment to inclusive education, UDL has been traditionally focused on the higher education sector with little discussion about the role UDL can play at primary and second-level education to achieve inclusion. Furthermore, there has been no research to date on the extent to which education policy reforms are introducing part, or all, of the aspects of the UDL framework. The purpose of this paper is to examine the extent to which UDL is gaining momentum in Irish primary and second-level education through an analysis of curriculum policy. This paper examines the development and evolution of UDL in Irish education policy over the past decade by exploring the use of UDL in national educational curriculum frameworks. The paper highlights how UDL is slowly and implicitly emerging in education policy at a national level but suggests further momentum could be gained from its inclusion in Initial Teacher Education (ITE) and professional development programmes. By exploring the development of UDL within existing policy contexts, the paper argues for a more explicit commitment to UDL as part of ongoing curriculum reform at the primary level, the review of Senior Cycle, and Ireland’s broader inclusive education agenda.https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7102/11/7/341universal design for learninginclusive educationpolicyprimary educationsecond-level educationIreland
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Margaret Flood
Joanne Banks
spellingShingle Margaret Flood
Joanne Banks
Universal Design for Learning: Is It Gaining Momentum in Irish Education?
Education Sciences
universal design for learning
inclusive education
policy
primary education
second-level education
Ireland
author_facet Margaret Flood
Joanne Banks
author_sort Margaret Flood
title Universal Design for Learning: Is It Gaining Momentum in Irish Education?
title_short Universal Design for Learning: Is It Gaining Momentum in Irish Education?
title_full Universal Design for Learning: Is It Gaining Momentum in Irish Education?
title_fullStr Universal Design for Learning: Is It Gaining Momentum in Irish Education?
title_full_unstemmed Universal Design for Learning: Is It Gaining Momentum in Irish Education?
title_sort universal design for learning: is it gaining momentum in irish education?
publisher MDPI AG
series Education Sciences
issn 2227-7102
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Responding to student diversity has become a key policy priority in education systems around the world. In addition to international and national institutional policies, major changes are underway in instructional practices and pedagogy in many national contexts. Universal Design for Learning (UDL) has become a key pedagogical approach used in education systems which seek to promote inclusive and equitable education in response to student diversity. Despite Ireland’s policy commitment to inclusive education, UDL has been traditionally focused on the higher education sector with little discussion about the role UDL can play at primary and second-level education to achieve inclusion. Furthermore, there has been no research to date on the extent to which education policy reforms are introducing part, or all, of the aspects of the UDL framework. The purpose of this paper is to examine the extent to which UDL is gaining momentum in Irish primary and second-level education through an analysis of curriculum policy. This paper examines the development and evolution of UDL in Irish education policy over the past decade by exploring the use of UDL in national educational curriculum frameworks. The paper highlights how UDL is slowly and implicitly emerging in education policy at a national level but suggests further momentum could be gained from its inclusion in Initial Teacher Education (ITE) and professional development programmes. By exploring the development of UDL within existing policy contexts, the paper argues for a more explicit commitment to UDL as part of ongoing curriculum reform at the primary level, the review of Senior Cycle, and Ireland’s broader inclusive education agenda.
topic universal design for learning
inclusive education
policy
primary education
second-level education
Ireland
url https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7102/11/7/341
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