Remove Reading Remove Social Studies Remove Universal Design
article thumbnail

5 ways to leverage UDL for student inclusivity

eSchool News

Inclusive educators often use Universal Design for Learning (UDL) to provide students with consistent access to engaging content and effective paths for achieving educational goals in classrooms where they experience a greater sense of belonging. With this in mind, we ask, “How do you share content with your students?”

article thumbnail

#6: 5 ways to leverage UDL for student inclusivity

eSchool News

Inclusive educators often use Universal Design for Learning (UDL) to provide students with consistent access to engaging content and effective paths for achieving educational goals in classrooms where they experience a greater sense of belonging. With this in mind, we ask, “How do you share content with your students?”

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Trending Sources

article thumbnail

From Advocating to Letting Your Nerd Flag Fly, Educators Are Grateful For Lessons From Students

Edsurge

What are you reading?” Who says the passage we read about in a grammar lesson can’t be from Martin Luther King, Jr.? But the problem was, I never knew if any of it mattered to them, until I saw Elif reading The Diary of Anne Frank. Seeing her read that book changed me. Seeing her read that book changed me.

Education 122
article thumbnail

Not Just for Math: A Tiered System of Learning Supports for Any Subject

Cult of Pedagogy

In my work with kids, if I’m going to get a 12-year-old to talk about something they feel vulnerable about — not reading fluently, failing the test, not understanding the homework — then I need to be both vulnerable and honest with them. Tier 6: Test Pulling Nate When I was in high school, I cheated on a social studies test.

Math 112
article thumbnail

Beyond English: Why Writing Belongs in Every Classroom

Catlin Tucker

If you’re reading this and you teach math, history, science, foreign language, art, or any other subject, I want to make a compelling case for the powerful impact that writing can have in your class and on your students. Writing improves reading skills (Graham & Herbert, 2010; Shanahan, 2016). Graham, S., & Hebert, M.

Writing 261
article thumbnail

How to Keep Teaching Well When DEI is Under Attack

Cult of Pedagogy

I’m very encouraged to read about how individual district leaders are refusing to comply with the orders. Learn more about the Street Data process by reading the book and watching our video series that captures the work of teachers in two schools as they follow the protocol.