Reach Everyone, Teach Everyone: Universal Design for Learning in Higher Education (Teaching and Learning in Higher Education)

by Thomas J. Tobin

Paperback, 2018

Status

Available

Call number

371.9

Publication

West Virginia University Press (2018), Edition: 1st, 312 pages

Description

"Advocates for the rights of people with disabilities have worked hard to make universal design in the built environment "just part of what we do." We no longer see curb cuts, for instance, as accommodations for people with disabilities, but perceive their usefulness every time we ride our bikes or push our strollers through crosswalks. This is also a perfect model for Universal Design for Learning (UDL), a framework grounded in the neuroscience of why, what, and how people learn. Tobin and Behling show that, although it is often associated with students with disabilities, UDL can be profitably broadened toward a larger ease-of-use and general diversity framework. Captioned instructional videos, for example, benefit learners with hearing impairments but also the student who worries about waking her young children at night or those studying on a noisy team bus. Reach Everyone, Teach Everyone is aimed at faculty members, faculty-service staff, disability support providers, student-service staff, campus leaders, and graduate students who want to strengthen the engagement, interaction, and performance of all college students. It includes resources for readers who want to become UDL experts and advocates: real-world case studies, active-learning techniques, UDL coaching skills, micro- and macro-level UDL-adoption guidance, and use-them-now resources"--… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member rivkat
Presents the Universal Design for Learning (UDL) framework as particularly useful for mobile learners. Students who need to keep the noise down so the kids won’t wake up can benefit from captions, for example, or listen to audio versions of study guides as they drive. But it’s relatively easy
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to present material in different modalities; they argue that it’s both harder and more important to give students opportunities to show their understanding in different modalities, not just written—a video or audio submission should also satisfy requirements in many cases. I’m sympathetic, but the point that testing biology in a written, closed-book exam is also testing “short-term and working memory, organization and time management, attention, and the ability to work under pressure,” and that it should be reconfigured to focus on testing biology principles, only makes sense if you really do just want to test biology understanding. But I think I am testing organization and time management/ability to work under pressure in my open-book midterms and exams; those are things that clients and employers value and that are in fact integrated with substantive knowledge in practice. Even so, I thought the emphasis on defining what success looked like as specifically as possible was helpful, and they do acknowledge that format can be part of what you’re trying to teach.
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Language

Original language

English

Physical description

312 p.; 5.5 inches

ISBN

1946684600 / 9781946684608

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