Abstract

South Africa has adopted an inclusive education policy in order to address barriers to learning in the education system. However, the implementation of this policy is hampered by the lack of teachers’ skills and knowledge in differentiating the curriculum to address a wide range of learning needs. In this paper we provided a background to inclusive education policy in South Africa and a brief exposition of an instructional design approach, Universal Design for Learning (UDL) that addresses a wide range of learning needs in a single classroom. We reported on a workshop conducted with teachers and therapists in South Africa as a first attempt to introduce UDL in this context. Knowledge of UDL was judged to be appropriate and useful by the course participants in the South African context as a strategy for curriculum differentiation in inclusive classrooms. Furthermore, knowledge of the UDL framework facilitates dialogue between teachers and therapists and provides a relatively simple and comprehensive approach for curriculum differentiation. We therefore conclude that there is potential for this approach that can be expanded through further teacher training.

Highlights

  • It is a matter of grave concern that children with disabilities on the African continent face barriers in the education system for a multitude of reasons (ACPF 2011)

  • In this paper we introduce Universal Design for Learning (UDL) principles and implementation guidelines, and argue that UDL can have a useful application in the South African context of inclusive education

  • In order to make this claim, we present a background on inclusive education in South Africa, followed by a background and overview of UDL

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Summary

Introduction

It is a matter of grave concern that children with disabilities on the African continent face barriers in the education system for a multitude of reasons (ACPF 2011). This extends the possibilities for effectively including all learners in the general curriculum, and reducing the impact of barriers to learning in the educational environment (Dalton 2005) It is precisely these possibilities that the strategy of curriculum differentiation is intended to develop in South African inclusive education policy. Collaboration was established between a researcher in inclusive education at the University of Cape Town and a UDL expert who completed her postdoctoral fellowship in UDL leadership at Boston College and the CAST Centre in 2010 and who has led a UDL workgroup of university educators in Rhode Island for more than five years This one-day workshop had the aim ‘to support teachers and therapists who are working with children with disabilities either in special schools or in the mainstream to meet a wider range of learning needs’. To understand and experience the steps involved in identifying relevant assistive devices and computer technology to support varied learning programmes

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