
Universal Design for Learning in the Early Childhood Classroom
Teaching Children of all Languages, Cultures, and Abilities, Birth ā 8 Years
- 216 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
Universal Design for Learning in the Early Childhood Classroom
Teaching Children of all Languages, Cultures, and Abilities, Birth ā 8 Years
About this book
Universal Design for Learning in the Early Childhood Classroom, Second Edition focuses on proactively designing PreK through Grade 3 classroom instruction, environments, and assessments that are flexible enough to ensure that teachers can accommodate the needs of all the students in their classrooms. Featuring updated language and examples to elevate discussions about inclusion and access along with a stronger anti-bias focus, this second edition includes new content on trauma-informed practice, strength-based approaches, social-emotional learning, family partnerships, and using remote and virtual technology. Highly practical and easy to use, this book remains THE essential guide to UDL in the early years.
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Information
1 Welcome to This Book and How to Use It
Schools Are Changing ā What Does That Mean to a Teacher?
- Universal Design for Learning (UDL) is a framework that helps all teachers in all classrooms adapt to meet the needs of each individual child. While the Center for Applied Special Technology (CAST) has started a great movement to use this approach for children with disabilities, we are expanding the framework to work with young children with varying needs.
- Developmentally Appropriate Practice (DAP) is an approach that focuses on supporting the learning of each individual young child according to their interests and level of development. Materials from the NAEYC list the three key considerations of DAP as knowing about child development and learning, knowing what is individually appropriate, and knowing what is culturally appropriate. In collaboration with the Council for Exceptional Children Division for Early Childhood, NAEYC made this key recommendation regarding early childhood curriculum: āTo benefit all children, including those with disabilities and developmental delays, it is important to implement an integrated, developmentally appropriate, universally designed curriculum framework that is flexible, comprehensive, and linked to assessment and program evaluation activitiesā (Division for Early Childhood [DEC], 2007, p. 3).
- DECAL is a guide for preparing all teachers to meet the needs of children with different experiences, cultures, abilities, and languages to focus professional learning and preparation (Nemeth, Brillante, & Mullen, 2017):
- Experiences (family income, home literacy practices, stress and trauma, safe environments, health and physical development supports, early care and education, etc.)
- Cultures (family, community, home country, traditions)
- Abilities (gifted, individual learning strengths/abilities/potentials, identified or potential disabilities, mental health issues)
- Languages (frequently occurring or rare languages, multiple languages).

What Teachers Need to Know and Be Able to Do in Schools of the Future
- how first and second languages develop
- how the brain of a young child learns, processes information, and manages emotions and behavior
- evidence of what works to facilitate communication across potential barriers
- best practices for scaffolding early learning
- principles of developmentally, linguistically, and culturally appropriate assessments
- how culture impacts learning
- how to teach young children with varying needs, including:
- Children with disabilities or children with individual abilities (not āspecial needsā)
- Children who are dual language or multilingual learners (instead of English language learners, EALs, or ELLs)
- Children from low-income, high-stress, or unstable housing experiences (rather than āpoor childrenā or āhigh-risk childrenā)
- Children with individual cultural backgrounds (rather than Asians or Hispanics).
- conduct and record accurate, objective observations
- conduct and interpret appropriate screening and assessments
- adapt communication strategies
- adapt lesson plans
- adapt teaching practices to respond to each childās needs
- design classroom space to make learning accessible to all
- build relationships with diverse families
- find, create, and modify classroom materials to meet the needs of all students
- use technology in appropriate ways to make learning accessible and relatable for students of all languages, cultures, and abilities
- facilitate a sense of community so that each child experiences the feeling of belonging.
New in This Edition ā Emergency Remote Learning and DECAL
Example
Table of contents
- Cover Page
- Half Title Page
- Series Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Meet the Authors
- 1 Welcome to This Book and How to Use It
- 2 Accessibility, Inclusion, and Universal Design
- 3 Using UDL as a Framework: Providing Multiple Means of Representation
- 4 Using UDL as a Framework: Providing Multiple Means of Action and Expression
- 5 Using UDL as a Framework: Providing Multiple Means of Engagement
- 6 Enhancing Partnerships with Families to Strengthen Learning
- 7 Where We Are Now and Where We Need to Go
- 8 Professional Development Resources: Using the UDL Framework Across the DECAL Elements to Support Change in Professional Practices
- 9 What Administrators Need to Know: Using the UDL Framework Across the DECAL Elements to Improve Outcomes for Teachers and Students
- References
- Appendix A Classroom Planning Resource Guide
- Appendix B Guided Questions
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