Much of the discourse around inclusion in higher education has thus far been grounded in scholarship on disability and impairment. As a result, inclusion in this sector has been defined and discussed mostly in terms of an ‘accommodation vs. universal design’ dichotomy – or retrofitting after the fact versus proactive inclusive design ahead of the class. The COVID pandemic has forced, around the world, an overnight online pivot, as well as many other periods of pedagogical innovation and disruption over a two-year duration. The overall outcomes of this period of transformation in teaching and learning has been mixed with scholars and practitioners showcasing both new opportunities and continuing hurdles for students with disabilities.
The most unexpected outcome, however, of the emergence of the tertiary sector from the pandemic is the realization that issues of accessibility and inclusion which have been energized by the pivot are now discussed widely by the student body and are no longer restricted to issues of disability and impairment. This presentation will draw from qualitative data collected within the student body on a campus in Western Canada about the way their expectations about accessibility, inclusion and student-centeredness have evolved during and post-COVID in their experiences of their progression through their degree. It explores the emerging advocacy that surrounds these topics.
The discussion and outcomes section of the presentation will lead participants on a reflection about the ways the pandemic experience and the online pivot have radically transformed: (i) learner expectation with regards to inclusion and accessibility, (ii) blurred the delineations between students with disabilities and the rest of the student body, and (iii) created the need for a new conceptualization of inclusion in the tertiary sector in the post-pandemic landscape. One of the assertions developed in the presentation is that this redefinition of inclusion for the post-pandemic tertiary sector presumes a reflection on being together in/with place in the way teaching and learning redefines presence, connection, and engagement for fuller accessibility.
Tackling the two solitudes. Bridging the conflicting lived realities of facu...Frederic Fovet
The lived experiences of faulty and accessibility service providers can vary significantly in higher education. This interactive live session will create an opportunity for a multidisciplinary reflection around the optimal ways to bridge the conflicting visions and experiences these two groups of key stakeholders have in relation to UDL adoption in the post-secondary classroom.
The term ‘two solitudes’ is often used in Canada to describe the cultural isolation and suspicion French and English communities develop in relation to each other. This concept will be used in this live interactive session to encourage participants to reflect on the differing views, visions and lived experiences of faculty and accessibility service personnel in relation to the adoption and implementation of UDL in the post-secondary sector. It will create an opportunity for a multidisciplinary reflection around the optimal ways to bridge the conflicting visions and experiences these two groups of key stakeholders have in relation to UDL adoption in the post-secondary classroom. This facilitated collective brainstorming session will support participants as they seek to (i) understand the cause of these conflicting subjective realities in relation to inclusion in the classroom, (ii) reflect on practices that may bridge these conflicting views, (iii) formulate calls for action which may be useful to campuses to nurture multistakeholder involvement as they promote UDL implementation.
Keynote –4th Pedagogy for Higher Education Large Classes (PHELC) Symposium, D...Frederic Fovet
Including learner diversity in large class teaching: Using Universal Design for Learning to sustain a systematic proactive reflection on social justice and accessibility
Addressing the needs of diverse learners in online and blended learning with ...Frederic Fovet
There has been growing but sporadic interest around Universal Design for Learning across the post-secondary sector in most jurisdictions over the last decade. This, in itself is encouraging and there is no doubt that the notion that inclusion must be achieved through proactive inclusive design rather than through retrofitting and accommodations is finally gaining in popularity and visibility.
UDL work, however, has long entertained an ambivalent and complex relationship with the rest of the scholarship on technology, blended learning and online learning. While the overlap between the UDL literature and these other bodies of practice is prima facie obvious and rich, in the field it has been somewhat difficult strategically to get buy-in for UDL from the practitioners and researchers traditionally involved in technology rich pedagogy.
The COVID pandemic and the pivot to online teaching and learning have shaken this status quo and offered unprecedented opportunities to demonstrate and showcase the relevance of UDL when it comes to systemically addressing learner diversity in online and blended pedagogy.
The pandemic, however, has also further muddied the waters, and disrupted many of the relationships between stakeholders in academia. The disruption has been such that it becomes challenging at times to foresee what lessons have been learnt from the pandemic and what new practices are likely to emerge from the COVID crisis. The presentation will examine what the future of UDL implementation within the growth of online and blended learning might look like in this disrupted and quickly changing landscape. It will invite participants to engage in lucid assessments of the opportunities and challenges the post-pandemic era gives rise to in this area.
Can you afford not to do this? Framing the pressing need for Universal Design...Frederic Fovet
Slides of my presentation as part of a panel run with Anna Santucci hosted by UCC and organized by CIRTL and James Northridge of UCC Inclusive
While Universal Design for Learning (UDL) had gained in momentum across Canadian post-secondary institutions over the last decade, it has been mostly framed in terms of pedagogical best practices. This has inherently meant that it has attracted and been appealing to instructors already very focused on transformative pedagogies and accessibility. Few other strategic approaches to UDL advocacy and strategic growth have to date been explored. Yet, many efforts to deploy UDL in the further and higher education sectors have stalled or not gained full momentum on the global scale. The time has perhaps come to conceptualize the need for UDL from powerful new and innovative stances, for optimal impact and growth outcomes.
An argument which is less often used to frame UDL but that carries perhaps more persuasive weight with faculty, staff, and administration is that of sustainable development. When examining current post-secondary practices with regards to accessibility, learner diversity, and inclusion, it becomes immediately and pressingly tangible that campuses can rarely afford to continue functioning efficiently with their existing models.
There are three distinct ways, this session will argue, in which sustainability can and should be used as a lens to examine the need for change in relation to inclusion and accessibility: (i) first the notion of sustainable teaching practices pushes us to question how long we can continue to design for the mythical mainstream classroom, without burning out while retrofitting constantly for the diverse student population that is in fact in our lecture halls; (ii) the sustainable development lens also pushes to examine out current model of service provision in relation to accessibility and to question how long this delivery model can last without imploding; (iii) lastly, considering the hyper neo-liberal mindset that currently characterizes the neo-liberal sector, it is reasonable to wonder if institutions have a genuine likelihood of surviving and thriving if they do not respond to the ever more eloquent needs of a diverse clientele.
This session will seek to examine and showcase how UDL addresses these three areas of concern related to sustainable development. The session will be followed by a 30-minute panel during which these themes will continue to be explored in a fully interactive manner with the audience. The outcomes include:
- Acknowledge the impact of sustainability as a lens to promote UDL within campuses;
- Explore arguments and examples that may be useful to showcase UDL within a sustainability approach in the participants’ own institutions;
- Identify stakeholder relationship which must be developed and strengthened to grow UDL implementation within the sustainable development lens.
Towards an intersectional approach to accessibility in the post-secondary lan...Frederic Fovet
The accessibility momentum has grown exponentially over the last decade in Canada, much like it has in other jurisdictions. With growing numbers of students making requests for accessibility services, and vast numbers of students identifying as experiencing barriers in learning, discussing the inclusion of students with disabilities has now become the norm on most post-secondary. Campuses. Delivery of services has had to be refined and accelerated. There is innovation in the way faculty are now engaged in a reflection on inclusion. Importantly inclusive design is now talked about much more openly, with faculty embracing their role as designers and Universal Design for Learning taking a central stage within the Teaching and Learning suites that support instructors.
While change has been impressive and it is now fair to assert that higher education is much more focused than ever on inclusion, this discourse remains very narrowly focused on impairment and disability. This is problematic in many ways and threatens the further development of inclusive policies and of effective universal design practices. (i) First this narrow conceptualization of students with disabilities is problematic as it fails to acknowledge intersectionality and the way these students’ lived experience often also involves marginalization on the basis of nationality, race, sexual orientation, and gender. (ii) It becomes rapidly clear when instructors adopt a barriers analysis in the redesign of their courses or assessment with the use of inclusive design lenses such as UDL, that the barriers experienced by students with disabilities are also commonly encountered by other diverse learners. Efforts to convince instructors of the pressing need for inclusive design therefore lose momentum by ignoring many of the learners this reflection is pertinent for. (iii) Lastly in terms of strategic change and of the embedding of inclusive design in the mission statements and sustainable plans of campuses, there is strength in numbers and the lack of interdisciplinary discourse on inclusion and accessibility weakens efforts for growth of this agenda.
This fully interactive session will lead participants to thoroughly explore the interdisciplinary networks and dialogues that are necessary on their campuses to trigger change and to widen the discourse on accessibility to include all key stakeholders. It is action focused and aims to offer the participants the opportunity to develop an immediate plan as to the ways they can become change agent in this process of interdisciplinary work around accessibility. The session is based on qualitative research carried out in Canada with faculty and support personnel that seeks to explore the hurdles and opportunities that currently exist within the process of creating interdisciplinary efforts towards accessibility across post-secondary institutions.
Keynote Presentation at the IT Sligo UDL Conference Frederic Fovet may 26Frederic Fovet
While there have been bold developments in the use of Universal Design for Learning (UDL) in the post-secondary sector over the last ten years on both sides of the Atlantic, much of these efforts have focused on showcasing the pedagogical benefits of its implementation. This discourse has remained a little naïve when it comes to management of change and organizational leadership. In the worst case scenarios, naivety has given way to actual clumsiness, which has been counter-productive in getting buy-in from faculty.
This session will explore the challenges and opportunities of UDL implementation across post-secondary campuses and give full consideration to the numerous organizational variables which impact this process. It will argue that many of the UDL initiatives witnessed in Higher Education over the years have been doomed to stagnation or to a process of slow death because there has been a lack of strategic reflection at the start of these processes. It is an opportune time to learn from these lessons, and to devise blue prints for the strategic management of UDL integration that acknowledge the complexity of the post-secondary landscape.
A new dramatic set of variables now affects this process of implementation: the COVID-19 crisis has irretrievably changed the realities of Higher Education and its modus operandi. It would be unrealistic to hope to ever return to a pre-pandemic ‘normal’, and in many ways the COVID crisis has been the catharsis for radical changes which had been a long time coming in a destabilized, hyper-competitive, and mostly unsustainable landscape. This complex and charged climate will appear, to many, as rife with hurdles when it comes to UDL implementation. The last year and a half has indeed seen a shift back to medical model practices and a loss of ground for may inclusion advocates. It will nevertheless be argued in the presentation that the COVID pandemic has also offered unprecedented opportunities to position UDL as a sustainable framework well suited to the post-pandemic reality.
Tackling the two solitudes. Bridging the conflicting lived realities of facu...Frederic Fovet
The lived experiences of faulty and accessibility service providers can vary significantly in higher education. This interactive live session will create an opportunity for a multidisciplinary reflection around the optimal ways to bridge the conflicting visions and experiences these two groups of key stakeholders have in relation to UDL adoption in the post-secondary classroom.
The term ‘two solitudes’ is often used in Canada to describe the cultural isolation and suspicion French and English communities develop in relation to each other. This concept will be used in this live interactive session to encourage participants to reflect on the differing views, visions and lived experiences of faculty and accessibility service personnel in relation to the adoption and implementation of UDL in the post-secondary sector. It will create an opportunity for a multidisciplinary reflection around the optimal ways to bridge the conflicting visions and experiences these two groups of key stakeholders have in relation to UDL adoption in the post-secondary classroom. This facilitated collective brainstorming session will support participants as they seek to (i) understand the cause of these conflicting subjective realities in relation to inclusion in the classroom, (ii) reflect on practices that may bridge these conflicting views, (iii) formulate calls for action which may be useful to campuses to nurture multistakeholder involvement as they promote UDL implementation.
Keynote –4th Pedagogy for Higher Education Large Classes (PHELC) Symposium, D...Frederic Fovet
Including learner diversity in large class teaching: Using Universal Design for Learning to sustain a systematic proactive reflection on social justice and accessibility
Addressing the needs of diverse learners in online and blended learning with ...Frederic Fovet
There has been growing but sporadic interest around Universal Design for Learning across the post-secondary sector in most jurisdictions over the last decade. This, in itself is encouraging and there is no doubt that the notion that inclusion must be achieved through proactive inclusive design rather than through retrofitting and accommodations is finally gaining in popularity and visibility.
UDL work, however, has long entertained an ambivalent and complex relationship with the rest of the scholarship on technology, blended learning and online learning. While the overlap between the UDL literature and these other bodies of practice is prima facie obvious and rich, in the field it has been somewhat difficult strategically to get buy-in for UDL from the practitioners and researchers traditionally involved in technology rich pedagogy.
The COVID pandemic and the pivot to online teaching and learning have shaken this status quo and offered unprecedented opportunities to demonstrate and showcase the relevance of UDL when it comes to systemically addressing learner diversity in online and blended pedagogy.
The pandemic, however, has also further muddied the waters, and disrupted many of the relationships between stakeholders in academia. The disruption has been such that it becomes challenging at times to foresee what lessons have been learnt from the pandemic and what new practices are likely to emerge from the COVID crisis. The presentation will examine what the future of UDL implementation within the growth of online and blended learning might look like in this disrupted and quickly changing landscape. It will invite participants to engage in lucid assessments of the opportunities and challenges the post-pandemic era gives rise to in this area.
Can you afford not to do this? Framing the pressing need for Universal Design...Frederic Fovet
Slides of my presentation as part of a panel run with Anna Santucci hosted by UCC and organized by CIRTL and James Northridge of UCC Inclusive
While Universal Design for Learning (UDL) had gained in momentum across Canadian post-secondary institutions over the last decade, it has been mostly framed in terms of pedagogical best practices. This has inherently meant that it has attracted and been appealing to instructors already very focused on transformative pedagogies and accessibility. Few other strategic approaches to UDL advocacy and strategic growth have to date been explored. Yet, many efforts to deploy UDL in the further and higher education sectors have stalled or not gained full momentum on the global scale. The time has perhaps come to conceptualize the need for UDL from powerful new and innovative stances, for optimal impact and growth outcomes.
An argument which is less often used to frame UDL but that carries perhaps more persuasive weight with faculty, staff, and administration is that of sustainable development. When examining current post-secondary practices with regards to accessibility, learner diversity, and inclusion, it becomes immediately and pressingly tangible that campuses can rarely afford to continue functioning efficiently with their existing models.
There are three distinct ways, this session will argue, in which sustainability can and should be used as a lens to examine the need for change in relation to inclusion and accessibility: (i) first the notion of sustainable teaching practices pushes us to question how long we can continue to design for the mythical mainstream classroom, without burning out while retrofitting constantly for the diverse student population that is in fact in our lecture halls; (ii) the sustainable development lens also pushes to examine out current model of service provision in relation to accessibility and to question how long this delivery model can last without imploding; (iii) lastly, considering the hyper neo-liberal mindset that currently characterizes the neo-liberal sector, it is reasonable to wonder if institutions have a genuine likelihood of surviving and thriving if they do not respond to the ever more eloquent needs of a diverse clientele.
This session will seek to examine and showcase how UDL addresses these three areas of concern related to sustainable development. The session will be followed by a 30-minute panel during which these themes will continue to be explored in a fully interactive manner with the audience. The outcomes include:
- Acknowledge the impact of sustainability as a lens to promote UDL within campuses;
- Explore arguments and examples that may be useful to showcase UDL within a sustainability approach in the participants’ own institutions;
- Identify stakeholder relationship which must be developed and strengthened to grow UDL implementation within the sustainable development lens.
Towards an intersectional approach to accessibility in the post-secondary lan...Frederic Fovet
The accessibility momentum has grown exponentially over the last decade in Canada, much like it has in other jurisdictions. With growing numbers of students making requests for accessibility services, and vast numbers of students identifying as experiencing barriers in learning, discussing the inclusion of students with disabilities has now become the norm on most post-secondary. Campuses. Delivery of services has had to be refined and accelerated. There is innovation in the way faculty are now engaged in a reflection on inclusion. Importantly inclusive design is now talked about much more openly, with faculty embracing their role as designers and Universal Design for Learning taking a central stage within the Teaching and Learning suites that support instructors.
While change has been impressive and it is now fair to assert that higher education is much more focused than ever on inclusion, this discourse remains very narrowly focused on impairment and disability. This is problematic in many ways and threatens the further development of inclusive policies and of effective universal design practices. (i) First this narrow conceptualization of students with disabilities is problematic as it fails to acknowledge intersectionality and the way these students’ lived experience often also involves marginalization on the basis of nationality, race, sexual orientation, and gender. (ii) It becomes rapidly clear when instructors adopt a barriers analysis in the redesign of their courses or assessment with the use of inclusive design lenses such as UDL, that the barriers experienced by students with disabilities are also commonly encountered by other diverse learners. Efforts to convince instructors of the pressing need for inclusive design therefore lose momentum by ignoring many of the learners this reflection is pertinent for. (iii) Lastly in terms of strategic change and of the embedding of inclusive design in the mission statements and sustainable plans of campuses, there is strength in numbers and the lack of interdisciplinary discourse on inclusion and accessibility weakens efforts for growth of this agenda.
This fully interactive session will lead participants to thoroughly explore the interdisciplinary networks and dialogues that are necessary on their campuses to trigger change and to widen the discourse on accessibility to include all key stakeholders. It is action focused and aims to offer the participants the opportunity to develop an immediate plan as to the ways they can become change agent in this process of interdisciplinary work around accessibility. The session is based on qualitative research carried out in Canada with faculty and support personnel that seeks to explore the hurdles and opportunities that currently exist within the process of creating interdisciplinary efforts towards accessibility across post-secondary institutions.
Keynote Presentation at the IT Sligo UDL Conference Frederic Fovet may 26Frederic Fovet
While there have been bold developments in the use of Universal Design for Learning (UDL) in the post-secondary sector over the last ten years on both sides of the Atlantic, much of these efforts have focused on showcasing the pedagogical benefits of its implementation. This discourse has remained a little naïve when it comes to management of change and organizational leadership. In the worst case scenarios, naivety has given way to actual clumsiness, which has been counter-productive in getting buy-in from faculty.
This session will explore the challenges and opportunities of UDL implementation across post-secondary campuses and give full consideration to the numerous organizational variables which impact this process. It will argue that many of the UDL initiatives witnessed in Higher Education over the years have been doomed to stagnation or to a process of slow death because there has been a lack of strategic reflection at the start of these processes. It is an opportune time to learn from these lessons, and to devise blue prints for the strategic management of UDL integration that acknowledge the complexity of the post-secondary landscape.
A new dramatic set of variables now affects this process of implementation: the COVID-19 crisis has irretrievably changed the realities of Higher Education and its modus operandi. It would be unrealistic to hope to ever return to a pre-pandemic ‘normal’, and in many ways the COVID crisis has been the catharsis for radical changes which had been a long time coming in a destabilized, hyper-competitive, and mostly unsustainable landscape. This complex and charged climate will appear, to many, as rife with hurdles when it comes to UDL implementation. The last year and a half has indeed seen a shift back to medical model practices and a loss of ground for may inclusion advocates. It will nevertheless be argued in the presentation that the COVID pandemic has also offered unprecedented opportunities to position UDL as a sustainable framework well suited to the post-pandemic reality.
Getting the message across silos: exploring the difficult art of involving mu...Frederic Fovet
Plenary presentation at the Universal Design for Learning National Conference. Climbing the UDL Ladder: Building a Culture of Inclusion in Higher Education: "Overcoming Obstacles to Enhance and Sustain UDL Collaboration in Tertiary Education"
Keynote Presentation Universell Norway May 25 Frederic Fovet
Keynote presentation at the Nasjonalt webinar om inkluderende læringsmiljø - Unoversell, Norway
Exploring the need for sustainable ‘whole campus’ approaches to the Inclusion of diverse learners
UDL implementation in higher education during the COVID crisisFrederic Fovet
Abstract: After a decade of advocacy across North American campuses, it can be fairly asserted that Universal Design for Learning (UDL) is finally having an impact on the inclusion of students with Disabilities across campuses. It is helping shift instructors and departments away from medical model approaches to students with Disabilities, and facilitating the adoption of the social model of disability in classroom practices.
In 2020, however, the COVID pandemic forced campus closures and an overnight shift to online instruction and assessment across the world. Many have argued that this pivot has helped increase awareness of accessibility and has developed inclusive design as a mindset among instructors. Equally numerous are researchers and practitioners who feel that the pandemic has weakened institutions’ commitment to inclusion, made accessible learning more difficult to achieve, and generally hindered the development of UDL in Higher Education.
This interactive session will lead the audience in assessing to what extent each of these assertions might be true, and how campuses can draw important lessons from these experiences, in relation to UDL implementation.
The presentation draws from multiple interactive workshops which have been offered to UDL advocates and faculty throughout the pandemic. It presents the analysis of phenomenological data gathered throughout these professional development sessions.
Creating sustainable foundations for the development of social emotional lear...Frederic Fovet
The scholarship on social emotional learning (SEL) has grown exponentially over the last decade. While its beneficial impact on best practices in school is immediately palpable, developing and strengthening buy-in for SEL in schools has, on the other hand, been strenuous in many contexts globally. One reason for this pushback is the lack of clear current theoretical connection, in the eyes of teachers, with existing policies and practices that are already in place in most jurisdictions. In most pre-service teacher training, for example, just as in in-service professional development, SEL sits aside of inclusion as a topic and is presented to stakeholders as entirely distinct. In the field, similarly, SEL integration projects tend to rival projects on inclusion rather than complement them. This creates a struggle for resources which is counter productive. It also creates a degree of confusion in the mind of many teachers, which can lead to disengagement and push-back, when in fact these agenda compliment each other pedagogically with ease. Much of this tension is historical and relates to the way SEL was introduced at a distinct stage, in most jurisdictions, from other inclusive policies. This dichotomous strain is also due to the fact that the stakeholders promoting both agendas often have distinct theoretical backgrounds and professional training. This session will examine solutions to this tension and engage participants on how to optimally conceptualize SEL within existing legislative and pedagogical frameworks for inclusion.
The session will first review and analyze the existing tension between inclusion initiatives and efforts to grow SEL in K-12 schools. The second part of the presentation will examine in more detail qualitative data gathered in Canada, among K-12 teachers, that explores these individuals’ perceptions around the place of SEL within best practices for inclusion. The third section of the session will focus on solutions that may help erode or eliminate this tension and will seek to offer participants hands-on strategies that might be useful in their own national contexts.
Decolonising DMU: towards the anti-racist UniversityRichard Hall
Workshop materials for strategic visions and values workshop, at the university of Durham. Workshop focuses upon Decolonising DMU: towards the anti-racist University, and the tensions between EDI and decolonising work.
Frederic Fovet Presentatin at the UDL and Inclusive Practice Symposium: Reach...Frederic Fovet
Post-secondary campuses are attracting an increasingly diverse student population. This must be celebrated as it means that the post-secondary classroom is also increasingly representative of the population at large; it means as well that all students are confronted with diversity in their campus experience and learn to embrace it; the internationalization of post-secondary institutions furthermore leads to greater opportunities to develop global citizenship.
This diversity of the student population, however, is not always perceived by faculty as easy or seamless to address proactively. As a result, students’ expectations can often clash with current teaching and learning practices that have not changed as fast as the composition of the student body has done. This leads to friction. It is not just students with disabilities that are experiencing barriers in their learning; International students, second language learners, culturally diverse and racialized students, first generation students, Indigenous students, and non-traditional learners all report experiencing similar barriers in their learning in the post-secondary classroom. Together, these students often represent a majority on our campuses - a majority that does not feel learning is designed for their needs.
It is becoming urgent therefore to find ways of eroding this friction. The solutions must address the needs of diverse learners proactively, but also support faculty as they rethink their classroom practices. These solutions must be sustainable, user-friendly, cost-effective, and powerful; they must guarantee a rapid change in our teaching and learning landscape, uphold the standards of post-secondary education, and ensure the creation of genuinely inclusive provisions.
The session will explore how Universal Design for Learning is uniquely positioned as a framework to address these pressing needs. The session will be interactive and seek to empower participants with a firm mastery of the UDL principles, to offer them practical examples of their use in the classroom, and to guide them as they begin their journey with implementation.
Strategic Visions & Values: Inclusive Curricula and Leadership in Learning an...Richard Hall
Presentation for the Leadership in Learning and Teaching event at Durham University on 1 May 2019.
Project resources:
Universal Design for Learning: Evaluation Interim Report: https://www.dora.dmu.ac.uk/handle/2086/17106
A Literature Review of Universal Design for Learning: https://www.dora.dmu.ac.uk/handle/2086/17059
Freedom to Achieve: Project Evaluation Report: https://www.dora.dmu.ac.uk/handle/2086/16793
Examining the practicalities of accessibility and inclusion in post-pandemic ...Frederic Fovet
The push for extensive online teaching and learning had begun well before the COVID pandemic and the online pivot, but the last three years have dramatically intensified the reflection around what Education 4.0 might look like in the post-secondary. Consensus appears to privilege hybrid and blended learning as the format which is most likely to optimally meet the needs of learners in coming decades. Lessons from the three years of pandemic disruption have been rich and nuanced in this respect. Within this phenomenal momentum of pedagogical creativity and innovation, however, the situation in relation to accessibility and full inclusion of all diverse learners has been ambivalent, and the experiences of diverse students have been contradictory. This session showcases the qualitative analysis of phenomenological data collected among accessibility and inclusion specialists within higher education – faculty and support staff - regarding the challenges and opportunities encountered during these transformative three years. The theoretical paradigm within which this data is showcased and analyzed is interpretivist, but the work also acknowledges preoccupations of critical theory/ critical pedagogy. The discussion that emerges from these findings will focus on the ways these pandemic lessons on inclusive teaching and learning can now serve as an exceptional window to proactively frame smart pedagogies of the future that leave out no stakeholders. The final section of the session examines ways to integrate these pandemic lessons to generate sustainable best practices for accessibility and inclusion in transformative blended learning spaces, that succeed in going beyond ad hoc interventions and retrofitting.
Breaking free of teacher-centric beliefs about assessment Using Universal De...Frederic Fovet
Awareness of learner diversity is growing in the post-secondary sector. Recent societal phenomena such as the #MeToo and Black Lives Matter movements, the emergence of Truth and Reconciliation as an urgent national priority, and the growing youth voice around the fluidity of sexuality and gender have all brought to the surface the need for higher education to adapt and authentically address learner diversity. Equity Diversity and Inclusion policies have, as a result, flourished on most campuses in recent years, but these initiatives – it can be argued – remain overall conceptual rather than pragmatic. They also tend to target campus climate and policies, rather than pedagogy itself. There are few tangible tools readily available for faculty to translate these EDI objectives into effective change in classroom practices
And yet a malaise around the very format of instruction and assessment keeps growing. Most instructors are amply aware that many practices that are currently being perpetuated were designed when the learner population was historically oddly homogenous. There is tension in this contemporary and fast changing context and many classroom practitioners are thirsty for user-friendly, time efficient tools that might guide them effectively through this pedagogical metamorphosis without endangering standards, core teaching objectives, and external benchmarks – and without pushing them to exhaustion. Assessment is an area of this collective pedagogical reflection where fear of change is most tangible.
This fully interactive closing Keynote will encourage participants to explore, in workshop style, the use of Universal Design for Learning as a simple and sustainable framework to begin the journey of breaking free of teacher centric design in assessment. The first section of the session will encourage the participants to examine the need for change in this landscape and the pressing thirst for hands on tools for pedagogical transformation (the ‘why?’). Attention will be paid to the way the COVID pandemic and online pivot have made this urgency more tangible. The second part of the session will showcase the extent to which UDL offers a very specific appeal in this context, as a process to begin the journey towards inclusive design in assessment (the ‘how?’). The third part of the session will take a macro view of the process of pedagogical change in higher education, and stress the need to acknowledge a number of important institutional, strategic and organizational variables in order to create winning conditions for UDL adoption in the area of assessment (the “and now?”).
In this session, we’ll delve into the ways that institutions have been engaging faculty, creating courses and pathways, and working to build sustained infrastructure for civic learning and community engagement.
Embracing equity in a public health emergency: the role of UDL in guiding instructors as they adapt to an unprecedented reliance on online and hybrid teaching.
Gauging the impact of social model awareness among elementary and secondary s...Frederic Fovet
There has a been an exponential development – if not an explosion - of inclusive policies and practices adopted within the elementary and secondary sectors in most Global North jurisdictions over the last two decades. While the discourse around inclusion has grown as a result, it would be unwise to assume that inclusive practices have become the norm or that they have been seamlessly integrated: there is still a lot of tension and unease among teachers seeking to implement inclusive practices; this translates into hesitation and sometimes even a push back from school leaders; there remains much confusion at times as to the intentions and theoretical principles that ground these efforts.
The session will offer insights into a study which sought to determine to what extent an introduction to the Social Model of Disability was effective and impactful in allowing elementary and secondary school teachers to ground their work in the field of inclusive practices with conceptual clarity. It is argued that this has so far been the missing piece in pre-service teacher training as well as in-service professional development. The inclusion discourse within the primary and secondary landscape, both in terms of policy documents and field resources, has not explicitly or effectively integrated Disability Studies - and more specifically the Social Model of Disability - when framing and formulating inclusive provisions. As a result, teachers’ theoretical understanding of the foundations for inclusive reforms as they relate to the rights of children with disabilities is shaky at best and this affects these classroom professionals’ commitment to broad transformative pedagogical reforms. Bio-medical and deficit models prevail, and other lenses and constructs offered by the Disability Studies literature remain absent from this professional reflection.
The session explores qualitative data collected among K-12 teachers as they were being introduced to the key features of the social model of disability. The data analysis gauges to what extent this transformed their views on inclusion in the classroom.
This fully interactive session will lead the participants, in a hands-on fashion, along the journey experienced by these teachers and allow for an experiential understanding of the degree to which any material developing awareness of the social model of disability can have immediate impact on the clarity and effectiveness of inclusion efforts in the primary and secondary sectors. More widely, a discussion will be triggered in the session around the urgency of including Disability Studies scholarship in pre-service teacher training.
Beyond curiosity: building on initial professional development opportunities ...Frederic Fovet
This interactive workshop will offer participants the opportunity to reflect collectively on the impact initial professional development on UDL has, within institutions, on the scaling up of UDL initiatives. The journey from PD opportunity to strategic involvement in UDL implementation across teaching and learning on campuses is not as linear as might be assumed. A variety of ecological variables can affect the impact these windows of PD have on practice, or the scope of their amplification across institutions. The workshop will lead the participants as they consider, beyond the actual content of UDL PD opportunity, what factors may limit the impact such UDL micro-credentials, or on the contrary magnify their potential. The workshop offers an opportunity to reflect, from an operational and leadership lens, what winning conditions need to be in place for PD on UDL to authentically take roots and achieve maximum outcomes.
Nothing about them without them: Authentically engaging students in UDL growthFrederic Fovet
Presentation at the 1st International Universal Design for Learning Symposium Learning Together.
Maynooth University, June 8th, 2023
There has been a growing interest for Universal Design for Learning (UDL) as a framework for inclusion in both the K-12 and post-secondary sectors over the last decade, and this momentum has been noticeable globally. The body of literature which evidences the pedagogical benefits of UDL implementation for the inclusion of diverse learners is now broad and diversified. There is also growing interest in examining UDL implementation from a leadership and administrative perspective, examining it as a management of change process.
Throughout this growth in scholarship and field initiatives, the concepts of student voice and student advocacy have frequently been used and showcased. The literature regarding the learner role in the process of UDL implementation is, however, still limited. Placing learners in the driving seat when it comes to UDL adoption is therefore purely conceptual and abstract at this stage. It will be challenging to genuinely scale-up UDL as a framework, in both the K-12 sector and the post-secondary landscape, until students have considered with care and offered an active leadership role. Students’ perception of UDL and its objectives are key in the success of initiatives that seek to integrate it across organizations.
This fully interactive session will examine the various facets of the notion of learner involvement in the process of UDL adoption. First, the session will consider the way UDL must be explicitly discussed with learners within the class, while UDL initiatives are attempted. Failure to explain this process to students, and to actively engage them in it, significantly limits the scope of such efforts. The second part of the session will consider learner voice beyond the class itself, and will discuss ways to involve students as co-advocates for UDL growth, across institutions. This is a rich and complex process of critical empowerment which has unfortunately been so far rushed or ignored. The third part of the session will consider how UDL professional development should be addressed not just to educators but to student groups and student representatives. This section of the presentation will explore how the UDL principles must bee woven into such resources and PD for students and student groups, and how they must inform the design of such initiatives.
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Plenary presentation at the Universal Design for Learning National Conference. Climbing the UDL Ladder: Building a Culture of Inclusion in Higher Education: "Overcoming Obstacles to Enhance and Sustain UDL Collaboration in Tertiary Education"
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Exploring the need for sustainable ‘whole campus’ approaches to the Inclusion of diverse learners
UDL implementation in higher education during the COVID crisisFrederic Fovet
Abstract: After a decade of advocacy across North American campuses, it can be fairly asserted that Universal Design for Learning (UDL) is finally having an impact on the inclusion of students with Disabilities across campuses. It is helping shift instructors and departments away from medical model approaches to students with Disabilities, and facilitating the adoption of the social model of disability in classroom practices.
In 2020, however, the COVID pandemic forced campus closures and an overnight shift to online instruction and assessment across the world. Many have argued that this pivot has helped increase awareness of accessibility and has developed inclusive design as a mindset among instructors. Equally numerous are researchers and practitioners who feel that the pandemic has weakened institutions’ commitment to inclusion, made accessible learning more difficult to achieve, and generally hindered the development of UDL in Higher Education.
This interactive session will lead the audience in assessing to what extent each of these assertions might be true, and how campuses can draw important lessons from these experiences, in relation to UDL implementation.
The presentation draws from multiple interactive workshops which have been offered to UDL advocates and faculty throughout the pandemic. It presents the analysis of phenomenological data gathered throughout these professional development sessions.
Creating sustainable foundations for the development of social emotional lear...Frederic Fovet
The scholarship on social emotional learning (SEL) has grown exponentially over the last decade. While its beneficial impact on best practices in school is immediately palpable, developing and strengthening buy-in for SEL in schools has, on the other hand, been strenuous in many contexts globally. One reason for this pushback is the lack of clear current theoretical connection, in the eyes of teachers, with existing policies and practices that are already in place in most jurisdictions. In most pre-service teacher training, for example, just as in in-service professional development, SEL sits aside of inclusion as a topic and is presented to stakeholders as entirely distinct. In the field, similarly, SEL integration projects tend to rival projects on inclusion rather than complement them. This creates a struggle for resources which is counter productive. It also creates a degree of confusion in the mind of many teachers, which can lead to disengagement and push-back, when in fact these agenda compliment each other pedagogically with ease. Much of this tension is historical and relates to the way SEL was introduced at a distinct stage, in most jurisdictions, from other inclusive policies. This dichotomous strain is also due to the fact that the stakeholders promoting both agendas often have distinct theoretical backgrounds and professional training. This session will examine solutions to this tension and engage participants on how to optimally conceptualize SEL within existing legislative and pedagogical frameworks for inclusion.
The session will first review and analyze the existing tension between inclusion initiatives and efforts to grow SEL in K-12 schools. The second part of the presentation will examine in more detail qualitative data gathered in Canada, among K-12 teachers, that explores these individuals’ perceptions around the place of SEL within best practices for inclusion. The third section of the session will focus on solutions that may help erode or eliminate this tension and will seek to offer participants hands-on strategies that might be useful in their own national contexts.
Decolonising DMU: towards the anti-racist UniversityRichard Hall
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Frederic Fovet Presentatin at the UDL and Inclusive Practice Symposium: Reach...Frederic Fovet
Post-secondary campuses are attracting an increasingly diverse student population. This must be celebrated as it means that the post-secondary classroom is also increasingly representative of the population at large; it means as well that all students are confronted with diversity in their campus experience and learn to embrace it; the internationalization of post-secondary institutions furthermore leads to greater opportunities to develop global citizenship.
This diversity of the student population, however, is not always perceived by faculty as easy or seamless to address proactively. As a result, students’ expectations can often clash with current teaching and learning practices that have not changed as fast as the composition of the student body has done. This leads to friction. It is not just students with disabilities that are experiencing barriers in their learning; International students, second language learners, culturally diverse and racialized students, first generation students, Indigenous students, and non-traditional learners all report experiencing similar barriers in their learning in the post-secondary classroom. Together, these students often represent a majority on our campuses - a majority that does not feel learning is designed for their needs.
It is becoming urgent therefore to find ways of eroding this friction. The solutions must address the needs of diverse learners proactively, but also support faculty as they rethink their classroom practices. These solutions must be sustainable, user-friendly, cost-effective, and powerful; they must guarantee a rapid change in our teaching and learning landscape, uphold the standards of post-secondary education, and ensure the creation of genuinely inclusive provisions.
The session will explore how Universal Design for Learning is uniquely positioned as a framework to address these pressing needs. The session will be interactive and seek to empower participants with a firm mastery of the UDL principles, to offer them practical examples of their use in the classroom, and to guide them as they begin their journey with implementation.
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Project resources:
Universal Design for Learning: Evaluation Interim Report: https://www.dora.dmu.ac.uk/handle/2086/17106
A Literature Review of Universal Design for Learning: https://www.dora.dmu.ac.uk/handle/2086/17059
Freedom to Achieve: Project Evaluation Report: https://www.dora.dmu.ac.uk/handle/2086/16793
Examining the practicalities of accessibility and inclusion in post-pandemic ...Frederic Fovet
The push for extensive online teaching and learning had begun well before the COVID pandemic and the online pivot, but the last three years have dramatically intensified the reflection around what Education 4.0 might look like in the post-secondary. Consensus appears to privilege hybrid and blended learning as the format which is most likely to optimally meet the needs of learners in coming decades. Lessons from the three years of pandemic disruption have been rich and nuanced in this respect. Within this phenomenal momentum of pedagogical creativity and innovation, however, the situation in relation to accessibility and full inclusion of all diverse learners has been ambivalent, and the experiences of diverse students have been contradictory. This session showcases the qualitative analysis of phenomenological data collected among accessibility and inclusion specialists within higher education – faculty and support staff - regarding the challenges and opportunities encountered during these transformative three years. The theoretical paradigm within which this data is showcased and analyzed is interpretivist, but the work also acknowledges preoccupations of critical theory/ critical pedagogy. The discussion that emerges from these findings will focus on the ways these pandemic lessons on inclusive teaching and learning can now serve as an exceptional window to proactively frame smart pedagogies of the future that leave out no stakeholders. The final section of the session examines ways to integrate these pandemic lessons to generate sustainable best practices for accessibility and inclusion in transformative blended learning spaces, that succeed in going beyond ad hoc interventions and retrofitting.
Breaking free of teacher-centric beliefs about assessment Using Universal De...Frederic Fovet
Awareness of learner diversity is growing in the post-secondary sector. Recent societal phenomena such as the #MeToo and Black Lives Matter movements, the emergence of Truth and Reconciliation as an urgent national priority, and the growing youth voice around the fluidity of sexuality and gender have all brought to the surface the need for higher education to adapt and authentically address learner diversity. Equity Diversity and Inclusion policies have, as a result, flourished on most campuses in recent years, but these initiatives – it can be argued – remain overall conceptual rather than pragmatic. They also tend to target campus climate and policies, rather than pedagogy itself. There are few tangible tools readily available for faculty to translate these EDI objectives into effective change in classroom practices
And yet a malaise around the very format of instruction and assessment keeps growing. Most instructors are amply aware that many practices that are currently being perpetuated were designed when the learner population was historically oddly homogenous. There is tension in this contemporary and fast changing context and many classroom practitioners are thirsty for user-friendly, time efficient tools that might guide them effectively through this pedagogical metamorphosis without endangering standards, core teaching objectives, and external benchmarks – and without pushing them to exhaustion. Assessment is an area of this collective pedagogical reflection where fear of change is most tangible.
This fully interactive closing Keynote will encourage participants to explore, in workshop style, the use of Universal Design for Learning as a simple and sustainable framework to begin the journey of breaking free of teacher centric design in assessment. The first section of the session will encourage the participants to examine the need for change in this landscape and the pressing thirst for hands on tools for pedagogical transformation (the ‘why?’). Attention will be paid to the way the COVID pandemic and online pivot have made this urgency more tangible. The second part of the session will showcase the extent to which UDL offers a very specific appeal in this context, as a process to begin the journey towards inclusive design in assessment (the ‘how?’). The third part of the session will take a macro view of the process of pedagogical change in higher education, and stress the need to acknowledge a number of important institutional, strategic and organizational variables in order to create winning conditions for UDL adoption in the area of assessment (the “and now?”).
In this session, we’ll delve into the ways that institutions have been engaging faculty, creating courses and pathways, and working to build sustained infrastructure for civic learning and community engagement.
Embracing equity in a public health emergency: the role of UDL in guiding instructors as they adapt to an unprecedented reliance on online and hybrid teaching.
Gauging the impact of social model awareness among elementary and secondary s...Frederic Fovet
There has a been an exponential development – if not an explosion - of inclusive policies and practices adopted within the elementary and secondary sectors in most Global North jurisdictions over the last two decades. While the discourse around inclusion has grown as a result, it would be unwise to assume that inclusive practices have become the norm or that they have been seamlessly integrated: there is still a lot of tension and unease among teachers seeking to implement inclusive practices; this translates into hesitation and sometimes even a push back from school leaders; there remains much confusion at times as to the intentions and theoretical principles that ground these efforts.
The session will offer insights into a study which sought to determine to what extent an introduction to the Social Model of Disability was effective and impactful in allowing elementary and secondary school teachers to ground their work in the field of inclusive practices with conceptual clarity. It is argued that this has so far been the missing piece in pre-service teacher training as well as in-service professional development. The inclusion discourse within the primary and secondary landscape, both in terms of policy documents and field resources, has not explicitly or effectively integrated Disability Studies - and more specifically the Social Model of Disability - when framing and formulating inclusive provisions. As a result, teachers’ theoretical understanding of the foundations for inclusive reforms as they relate to the rights of children with disabilities is shaky at best and this affects these classroom professionals’ commitment to broad transformative pedagogical reforms. Bio-medical and deficit models prevail, and other lenses and constructs offered by the Disability Studies literature remain absent from this professional reflection.
The session explores qualitative data collected among K-12 teachers as they were being introduced to the key features of the social model of disability. The data analysis gauges to what extent this transformed their views on inclusion in the classroom.
This fully interactive session will lead the participants, in a hands-on fashion, along the journey experienced by these teachers and allow for an experiential understanding of the degree to which any material developing awareness of the social model of disability can have immediate impact on the clarity and effectiveness of inclusion efforts in the primary and secondary sectors. More widely, a discussion will be triggered in the session around the urgency of including Disability Studies scholarship in pre-service teacher training.
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Beyond curiosity: building on initial professional development opportunities ...Frederic Fovet
This interactive workshop will offer participants the opportunity to reflect collectively on the impact initial professional development on UDL has, within institutions, on the scaling up of UDL initiatives. The journey from PD opportunity to strategic involvement in UDL implementation across teaching and learning on campuses is not as linear as might be assumed. A variety of ecological variables can affect the impact these windows of PD have on practice, or the scope of their amplification across institutions. The workshop will lead the participants as they consider, beyond the actual content of UDL PD opportunity, what factors may limit the impact such UDL micro-credentials, or on the contrary magnify their potential. The workshop offers an opportunity to reflect, from an operational and leadership lens, what winning conditions need to be in place for PD on UDL to authentically take roots and achieve maximum outcomes.
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Maynooth University, June 8th, 2023
There has been a growing interest for Universal Design for Learning (UDL) as a framework for inclusion in both the K-12 and post-secondary sectors over the last decade, and this momentum has been noticeable globally. The body of literature which evidences the pedagogical benefits of UDL implementation for the inclusion of diverse learners is now broad and diversified. There is also growing interest in examining UDL implementation from a leadership and administrative perspective, examining it as a management of change process.
Throughout this growth in scholarship and field initiatives, the concepts of student voice and student advocacy have frequently been used and showcased. The literature regarding the learner role in the process of UDL implementation is, however, still limited. Placing learners in the driving seat when it comes to UDL adoption is therefore purely conceptual and abstract at this stage. It will be challenging to genuinely scale-up UDL as a framework, in both the K-12 sector and the post-secondary landscape, until students have considered with care and offered an active leadership role. Students’ perception of UDL and its objectives are key in the success of initiatives that seek to integrate it across organizations.
This fully interactive session will examine the various facets of the notion of learner involvement in the process of UDL adoption. First, the session will consider the way UDL must be explicitly discussed with learners within the class, while UDL initiatives are attempted. Failure to explain this process to students, and to actively engage them in it, significantly limits the scope of such efforts. The second part of the session will consider learner voice beyond the class itself, and will discuss ways to involve students as co-advocates for UDL growth, across institutions. This is a rich and complex process of critical empowerment which has unfortunately been so far rushed or ignored. The third part of the session will consider how UDL professional development should be addressed not just to educators but to student groups and student representatives. This section of the presentation will explore how the UDL principles must bee woven into such resources and PD for students and student groups, and how they must inform the design of such initiatives.
Can we do it without school principals’ commitment? Exploring the complex imp...Frederic Fovet
There has been a growing interest for Universal Design for Learning (UDL) as a framework for inclusion in both the K-12 and post-secondary sectors over the last decade, and this momentum has been noticeable globally. The body of literature which evidences the pedagogical benefits of UDL implementation for the inclusion of diverse learners is now broad and diversified. There is also growing interest in examining UDL implementation from a leadership and administrative perspective, examining it as a management of change process. In the K-12 sector, this scholarship is not as developed as it could be if it is going to effectively support and guide the efforts of teachers as they attempt to scale up their initiatives and achieve sustainable integration across schools. There are many variables teachers seeking to adopt UDL have to battle with, and the roles and positions of school principal is a factor often cited.
This presentation will explore in an interactive format the much under-researched impact of the know-how, disposition, and commitment of school principals towards UDL integration. An awareness of this variable and its impact is crucial when designing future blueprints for the effective growth of UDL across schools. The session will be run in a workshop format that will encourage participants to share their experiences authentically and to build on some of the frustrations that will be expressed about the frequent ambivalence of school leaders in the process of UDL growth. The anticipated outcomes are as follows. Participants will:
- Reflect on the impact of school leadership on the success of UDL implementation
- Examine the resources and training school principals are in need of to more effectively support UDL initiatives
- Explore the challenges faced by school principals when trying to support UDL projects, within a wider landscape of neoliberal pressures
From curiosity to sustainable individual implementation: Getting settled into...Frederic Fovet
While Universal Design for Learning (UDL) had gained in momentum across Canadian post-secondary institutions over the last decade, oftentimes instructors who are introduced to the framework get few opportunities to consider detailed implementation or to reflect fully on its implication for their own teaching and learning – beyond the initial increased awareness of the need for accessibility and inclusion of all diverse learners. As a result, much of this initial curiosity and interest tends to die down, for simple lack of support, infrastructure, and time.
This session will seek to address this common issue and ongoing challenge, by offering participants a half day of deep immersion into the principles of UDL and their implementation in class. After a quick refresher of the key characteristics of the UDL approach, the participants will be encouraged to work in teams on hands-on case studies and scenarios that will offer them the opportunity to fully gauge what the redesign of a class delivery or assessment – along UDL principles - might look like and imply.
The workshop will also include a large segment reserved for interactive questions and discussions. This will offer participants the opportunity to develop their reflection around UDL implementation in their practice and individual professional context in detail and depth. The whole group will have the opportunity to review a number of hands on concerns and preoccupations and to equip all participants with a degree of autonomy in relation to the implementation of UDL into their teaching and learning.
The COVID pandemic has forced onto schools an overnight pivot to virtual delivery and assessment. This emergency provisions and their online component have remained a part of the reality of teaching and learning for large parts of the last two years. Innovative and emergent uses of technology in the classroom have blossomed rapidly and found a rich and opportune context for growth. This two-year period of change and experimentation has now created an unprecedented thirst for the long-term adoption and integration of digital solutions in teaching and learning – be they virtual, hybrid of face to face.
Much of the reflection that has occurred around the use and integration of technology and virtual tools in teaching and learning, however, has ignored learner diversity, accessibility, and inclusion. The time constraints, exceptional circumstances of the pivot, the urgency of the measures, and the understanding arrangements were temporary have contributed to a certain laissez faire in terms of accessibility. The legal notion of undue hardship has explicitly been used by many schools and school districts to circumvent legislation on inclusion and human rights provisions which normally guarantee accessibility to learning.
This session will first examine the various concerns regarding inclusion and accessibility which have arisen during the pandemic in relation to digital learning. The presentation will then analyze the inherent risks that are present in relation to social justice and inclusion, as educational organizations transition back to face-to-face instruction and seek to retain the digital flavour that has blossomed over the last two years. The third section of this paper is a call for action which delineates the safeguards that must be in place as digital transformation of teaching and learning gains momentum in the post-pandemic landscape.
Keynote at the DCUTL2020: Reflecting on inclusive teaching in a post-pandemic...Frederic Fovet
The COVID pivot to online and blended learning has radically shaken teaching practices in the post-secondary sector, worldwide. Despite the overnight urgency and the rushed nature of the redesign, the shift to remote instruction and assessment has been a cathartic experience for individual instructors, departments and institutions as a whole. The pandemic has eroded the resistance to change which was prevalent in teaching and learning in many post-secondary landscapes. It has made classroom practitioners irreversibly conscious of their role and power as designers of the learning experience.
It would be naïve, however, to assert that this has been a period of only net gains. In the area of inclusion and social justice particularly, while there has been overall an increased awareness of learner diversity, accessibility and addressing diverse student needs have often been set aside or dismissed within the COVID contingency planning. The argument has been that the pandemic had made it impossible to focus on or to prioritize a Human Rights approach when so many other basic organizational priorities needed to be tackled with urgency.
The absence of focus on inclusion during the pandemic is concerning first because it has allowed a gap in opportunities to appear in most higher education landscapes – as inequities became exacerbated. The most worrying danger is, however, arguably yet to emerge. As instructors shift to the post-pandemic reality and integrate lessons from the COVID crisis into their practice, the prospect of adopting new teaching formats is increasingly appealing. A new, radically innovative conceptualization of blended learning is taking root - no longer seen as a response to remoteness, but instead as an optimized merging of best design considerations. It will be essential therefore, as this new vision of blended learning and its pedagogical potential emerge, to refocus attention on inclusion and learner diversity.
Universal Design for Learning (UDL), it will be argued in this presentation, has a key role to play in this reflection and will serve as a crucial framework to guide instructors as they navigate this new landscape and take on new responsibilities as lucid designers of fully blended experiences for the 21st century. The session will explore emerging needs in relation to inclusion within this new blended learning reality; it will examine specific ways UDL can be optimized as a lens to guarantee that inclusion remains a central concern in the coming years, as the post-secondary sector navigates this metamorphosis; lastly the session will consider the strategic and organizational challenges involved in giving UDL a central position within the pedagogical reflection which is unfolding in the post-pandemic landscape.
Frederic Fovet Keynote at the Perfect Blend Conference - Vancouver School BoardFrederic Fovet
Most schools around the world have been forced to launch extensive online and blended practices as the COVID pandemic precipitated the sector towards closure. This has been an unprecedented conjuncture for discovery, experimentation and exploration. As schools and teachers prepare for a post-pandemic landscape, it is also important nevertheless to acknowledge that the lessons learnt from these two years of forced change were not optimal. First, much of the work done online in the K-12 sector was not fully inclusive or designed for the full spectrum of diverse learners. Second, the blended and online practices that have emerged have generally been seen as poor substitutes, with teachers seeking to return to face to face urgently rather than reflectively integrating in their everyday teaching the rich pedagogical opportunities the blended formats have offered a glimpse of. The presentation will explore how Universal Design for Learning can be an immediately pertinent and effective framework, offering hands on tools, for teachers to capitalize on their pandemic experiences to transform their in-class practices, with the help of technology and a blended mindset.
From curiosity to systemic implementation: Making UDL buy-in a strategic inst...Frederic Fovet
There has been growing but sporadic interest around Universal Design for Learning across the post-secondary sector in most jurisdictions over the last decade. This, in itself is encouraging and there is no doubt that the notion that inclusion must be achieved through proactive inclusive design rather than through retrofitting and accommodations is finally gaining in popularity and visibility. While many of the initiatives seeking to implement UDL are effective and credible, these are usually led by individual instructors or small communities of practice. As such, they represent powerful illustrations of UDL in action but they fail to tackle the complexity of how systemic implementation can be achieved across institutions. This presentation will offer an ecological view of the numerous factors that come into play when institutions consider campus-wide UDL implementation, and will prepare participants to proactively prepare for this complexity. It is undeniable that the COVID pandemic and the pivot to online teaching and learning have further muddied the waters, and the presentation will seek to explore what specific post-pandemic UDL efforts are now necessary.
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There have been giant steps made in the last decade with regards to the ways data on student performance is collected, analyzed and used for school improvement (Breakspear, 2014; Rozgonjuk et al., 2019; Wu et al., 2020). Much of the impact of the analysis of this data lies in the fact that it has allowed for large international comparative studies that yield important conclusions on the effectiveness of teaching practices, curriculum, and modes of assessment (Dickinson, 2019; OECD 2000-2015). The PISA framework and annual PISA results have in particular allowed for revealing reflections, at international level, in relation to the objectives, ethos and performance of national educational structures (Krieg, 2019; Patrinos & Angrist, 2018).
International comparative studies carried out on the data collected for the purpose of these large surveys, however, have yet to examine learner diversity or educational system’s ability to develop, grow and sustain inclusive practices in schools (Krammer et al., 2021). As a result, a significant gap exists in the quantitative data that is emerging from international comparative studies (Ainscow, 2015; Booth & Ainscow, 2002; Poulsen & Hewson, 2014).
This presentation will (i) examine the limitations of international, comparative standardized data on the issues of learner diversity and inclusive practices, (ii) explore the quantitative tools that do exist but are currently under-utilized in terms of data mining, (iii) examine the challenges and opportunities which lie ahead in relation to the development of sustainable quantitative tools that might allow for comparative analysis of the various ways national education systems tackle the task of differentiating education.
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Knowledge and skills frameworks, generally called competency frameworks, for ELT teachers, trainers and managers have existed for a few years now. However, until I created one for my MA dissertation, there wasn’t one drawing together what we need to know and do to be able to effectively produce language learning materials.
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2. Land Acknowledgement
• Thompson Rivers University
campuses are on the traditional
lands of the Tk'emlúps te
Secwépemc (Kamloops campus)
and the T’exelc (Williams Lake
campus) within
Secwépemc'ulucw, the
traditional and unceded
territory of the Secwépemc. The
region TRU serves also extends
into the territories of the
St’át’imc, Nlaka’pamux,
Tŝilhqot'in, Nuxalk, and Dakelh
3. Personal lens
• Multifaceted interest in this topic
• Faculty perspective, including past roles supporting contract sessionals within
MEd programs which I have led (focus on student-centeredness and inclusion
within T&L)
• Three years as a Program head within a university offering exclusively online
graduate programs (focus on T&L in online delivery)
• Extensive experience as head of accessibility on a large Canadian campus
(focus on accessibility of T&L)
• Extensive experience as a UDL and inclusion consultant in tertiary (strategic
dimension of inclusion in T&L and sustainability in development)
4. Gauging the room – Introduction and context
• By show of hands, do you feel
that:
- it has become easier to cater for
the accessibility needs of diverse
learners during the pandemic and
to improve accessibility?
- it has become much more
challenging to address
accessibility and inclusion on our
campuses during the pandemic
years?
5. Introduction – Topical relevance
• The COVID pandemic has been the great
disruption on the 21st century in
education
• Inclusion which was only begin to emerge
as an area of focus in tertiary education
has been massively impacted by the
pandemic.
• In many ways, the inclusion of diverse
learners has deteriorated during this
period.
• In other specific ways, the development
of inclusive mindsets has improved.
• But beyond this troubling dichotomy in
experiences lies a much more profound
phenomenon: inclusion as a construct in
the post-secondary has changed
irreversibly.
6. Objectives of the Session
• Examine the context
• Explore the literature
• Acknowledge the theoretical and methodological stances
• Examine the assertions
• Consider the outcomes
7. Context
• Ongoing impact of the COVID pandemic online pivot
• Pressing realization that many diverse students have been massively impacted by the online pivot
• Focus on accessibility has centered on learners with impairments
• The barriers culturally diverse learners (International Students, second language learners,
Indigenous students, immigrant first generation students) have experienced have been
monumental and mostly unreported/ under-researched. The socio-economics have as also been
widely ignored during COVID.
• Seismic societal disruptions that place simultaneous pressure on the tertiary sector
• #MeToo, Black Lives Matter, Calls for Action of the TRC Report, SOGI demands for recognition have
all created large societal disruptions that ripple into the post-secondary landscapes
• The T&L tertiary sector is finding challenging to keep up and to integrate these values into
classroom practices (Bhopal, 2022)
• Mounting neoliberal pressure on search for greater efficiencies
• The focus is not just philanthropic and centered on social justice. EDI had become a key concern
in a tertiary landscape which has entered a shrinking phase and faces unprecedented business
models pressures of competition, visibility, branding, and financial efficiencies.
• There is an urgent search for sustainable models that positions institutions favourably
8. An overview of the literature
• Original body of scholarship around Civil Rights and legislative duties towards
students with disabilities (Fernández-Batanero et al., 2022)
• Reframing of inclusion and diversity as concepts to include race, cultural and
linguistic diversity, SOGI, socio-economics and class (Madriaga, 2023)
• Mounting urgency around the inclusion of diverse learners in tertiary education
(Zhao & Watterston, 2021). Existing structures are seen as cracking at the seams
(Borkin, 2023)
• Growing body of scholarship around diverse leaners’ voices (Resch, 2023)
9. An overview of the literature (contd.)
• Emergence of various models for inclusion that seem more promising than
retrofitting or ‘accommodations’ approach: differentiated instruction (Moallemi,
2023), UDL (Alqarni, 2022), but also critical pedagogy (Ghatak et al., 2023) and
culturally responsive pedagogy (Kieran & Anderson, 2019)
• Format of teaching and learning within which this inclusion must take place is ever
changing. Notion of online pedagogy or hybrid teaching has been revolutionized by
the pandemic. No longer the realm of a few select online institutions. Now the
norm for all institutions. An ambivalence, however, is very tangible (embrace or
return to old status quo?) (Witze, 2020)
• A post-pandemic urgency where learner expectations/ learner voice with regards to
T& L format is ever more present (Quinn, 2023)
10. Theoretical and methodological stance
• Theoretical stance
• Broad interpretivist stance (Krmac, 2022): ‘meaning making’ of higher ed professionals
navigating fast changing reality and rapidly evolving phenomena around inclusion
• Critical pedagogy backdrop (Knoetze, 2023): examining the inclusion of diverse learners
inevitably involves examining perpetuated power inequities within classroom settings
• Methodological process
• Auto-ethnography as a process in management of change in higher education (Higson-Bliss,
2023; McAllister & Brown, 2023)
• Positionality (unique perspective as faculty and ex accessibility manager)
• Consultant with frequent engagement with the field. Exploration of this data
• Ongoing projects with student groups around learner voice within inclusive policies and UDL
implementation
• Examining one’s own journey within a changing landscape of needs from the field
11. Assertions
• Incapacity of existing frameworks, structures and policies to adequately address the
needs of diverse learners. A literal systems erosion and exhaustion.
• A ‘systems issue’ in terms of absence of comprehensive funding models, lack of
interdisciplinary approaches and practices, siloed service provision, hyper-
fragmentation of the advocacy discourse for change.
• Challenges in translating to the classroom values that are frequently now floated in
terms of campus culture (full implementation of EDI objectives in T&L)
• Faculty difficult grappling with the sustainability of the teaching practices. Constant
feeling of tension and unease. Some talk about a culture clash in terms of T&L
expectations
• Inadequacy of a voluntary model for PD on inclusive pedagogy in a sector where
academic freedom is mistakenly seen as a limitation on the possible impact of
transformative practices. Urgent need for clarity with faculty associations, and in
collective bargaining, collective agreements, etc.
12. Assertions (contd.)
• Wider ambivalence and tension at institutional level where diverse learners are seen
as a market share and as revenue generating, while there is little evidence of
genuine commitments to channel some of that revenue towards creating equitable
and congenial T&L conditions for these students.
• Tipping point in the loudness and eloquence of student voices. Learners have been
emboldened by the pandemic. The ‘great quit’ is not just about demanding fairer
employment terms, it is also about renegotiating all power dynamics with the
corporate world – including academia as a neo-liberal institution
• Dangerous tension between Human Rights protection mechanisms and emerging
progressive pedagogies. Fear from field practitioners of being ironically ‘doing less’
while attempting to do much more. Backlash effect of HR complaints processes.
• Uneasy dead end in the form of out of court settlements, NDA, and mediation-based
compensations: rectifies some wrongs but silences the urgent need for change.
13. Assertions (contd.)
Traditional
retrofitting
targeted at
students with
disabilities
Pandemic +
societal tumult
re social justice
+ mounting
competitiveness
in tertiary
Mounting student advocacy
Desire for change among
learner population
Growing expectations with
regards to inclusion
Faculty search for user-friendly
frameworks and T&L models to
support wider approach to
inclusion. UDL?
Institutional policy scramble to secure (i)
top-down EDI discourse and (ii) hands on
classroom practices that translate these EDI
policies into practice
14. Outcomes
• Creating Multidisciplinary Collaborations:
• Supporting the full spectrum of diverse learners requires a break-down of institutional silos.
Must bring together stakeholders who have not thus far collaborated (instructional
designers, staff who support various segments of the diverse learner population, inclusion
advocates who usually position themselves within Accessibility)
• Supporting faculty and exploring creative approaches to PD
• Striking gap between scholarship and practice. There are promising user-friendly models for
the inclusion of diverse learners, but little effort is placed on sustainable professional
development. Only existing momentum is left to sole classroom practitioner initiatives,
faculty led communities of practice, and publication driven experimentation.
• Widening the inclusive design and UDL discourses:
• Most inclusive frameworks, including UDL, have thus far overfocused on disability and
impairment. To gain relevance in this emerging field, it will need to be restructured to invite
in scholars and practitioners who have not to date been familiar with this discourse (bridge
to culturally responsive pedagogy, sustainability, social justice, etc.). This needs to be a
proactive and strategically planned process.
15. Outcomes and Caveat
• Enriching the Reflection on Online and hybrid Pedagogy:
• Post pandemic teaching is inherently virtual to some degree. The scholarship of online pedagogy has been
preoccupied for some time now in evidencing quality, the ability to deliver authentic and collective learning
experiences, the potential to be fully transformative for learners. The focus has been constructivism, social
constructivism, experiential learning, open education, active learning. There is a need now to create an
explicit overlap between these preoccupations on one hand, and the inclusion of diverse learners on the
other. This bridge building will be challenging because of disciplinary siloing.
• Strategic Implementation Challenges
• There are many factors that come into play within UDL implementation in the tertiary sector
• It is not a simple or linear process
• Post-secondary institutions are complex, multi-layered, siloed organizations.
• Change can be challenging. An ecological overview is essential
• Funding Implications
• The Funding model in place and many of the current funding practices and processes are grounded in deficit
model approaches.
• They are not congenial to the development of UDL
• There is therefore a concurrent reflection required on the transformation of funding for diversity in the
tertiary sector
16. Synthesis:Reimagininginclusionin higher educationin
transformationalpost-pandemictimes
• Conceptualizing a model to reflect this rapid changes in perceptions, mindsets and
expectations
• While we grapple with a return to the ‘old normal’, tertiary the T&L landscape has
shifted irreversibly
• Need to disentangle ourselves from an old obsolete discourse. Time to shed it with
intentionality
• Face head on the growing contradictions between Human Rights approaches and
new wave of inclusive practices (accommodations versus. UDL for example)
• Shift from a culture of referral to a culture of ownership by all tertiary stakeholders
• Adapt to a new economic reality and embrace sustainability within inclusion
strategies
• Be bold and imagine possibilities rather than grief about the break down of past
constructs
18. References & Resources
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International Conference on e-Learning & Innovative Pedagogies, University of Malta, April
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22. Contact details
• Frederic Fovet (PhD.)
• Assistant Professor, School of Education, Thompson Rivers University
• ffovet@tru.ca
• UDL and Inclusion Consultant
• Implementudl@gmail.com
• @Ffovet
• www.implementudl.com