南非高等教育中的通用学习设计和写作中心

Desiree Moodley
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引用次数: 0

摘要

像 "通用学习设计"(UDL)这样的变革性、包容性和解放性教育框架能否促进所有人的学业成功?种族主义和残障/残疾主义能否通过这样一种新兴的教育趋势来瓦解?这种趋势提供了对残障/残疾的重新定义,废除了压迫性的教学实践,这种实践使人们对特殊需求的建构性看法得以延续,而这种看法往往与种族和智力优越性存在负面关联。在后科维德时代的 21 世纪南非,这样一个强调身体、认知和语言不公正的框架能否在高等教育环境(如写作中心)中促进成绩,而不仅仅是达到学术读写标准?这些关键问题是本文提出的一些紧张问题,本文提出了一个令人信服但又有争议的尝试,即在由哈佛大学应用特殊技术中心的罗斯和迈耶开发的 UDL 框架所提供的残疾扩展定义范围内,促进学生的学习和成绩。虽然《科维德-19》的核心是一场大流行病,但这场全球性灾难加速了虚拟和混合学习媒介的学习和参与的技术发展。然而,鉴于 20 世纪中后期的技术爆炸,在许多方面,教育已经朝着这个方向发展。与以往任何时候相比,在写作中心和学术扫盲的角色中,对通用学习设计的认识尤为重要,因为技术驱动的方法可以解决社会公正问题。本文试图了解通用学习设计框架在 21 世纪后科维德时代南非高等教育中写作中心角色中的障碍和机遇。作为一名在南非和美国执业的合格写作顾问,本文对南非高等教育机构正在兴起的围绕采用通用学习设计框架的激烈对话及其对写作中心作用的影响进行了反思性评论,这些评论基于作者务实、普通的经验以及对通用学习设计和哈佛评论进行的研究。希望这篇反思性的论文能够使人们看到 "通用学习设计 "在满足学生个人学习需求方面可能存在的一些固有的并置问题,其原则是采用通用的方法使所有人都能学习成功,从而为进一步的研究和批评提供机会。
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Universal Design for Learning and writing centres in South African higher education
Could a transformative, inclusive and emancipatory educational framework like the Universal Design for Learning (UDL) advance academic success for all? Could racism and dis/ableism be dismantled through such an emerging educational trend that offers a redefinition of dis/ability abolishing oppressive pedagogical practices that perpetuate constructed views of special needs, often negatively correlated with racial and intellectual superiority? Could such a framework that foregrounds physical, cognitive and linguistic injustices advance achievement beyond merely meeting academic literacy standards within higher education settings like writing centres in a post-Covid 21st-century South Africa? These critical questions are some of the tensions raised in this paper proposing a compelling, yet controversial attempt at advancing student learning and achievement within an expanded definition of disability offered by the UDL framework developed by Rose and Meyer at the Center for Applied Special Technology at Harvard University. While Covid-19 centred around a pandemic, this global catastrophe accelerated the technological thrust into virtual and blended learning mediums of learning and engagement. Yet, given the technological explosion of the mid- and late 20th century, in many ways education have headed towards this direction. Now more than ever, the awareness of the Universal Design for Learning within the role of the writing centre and academic literacy is especially critical, given the drive for technologically driven approaches to address issues of social justice. This paper seeks to understand the obstacles and opportunities of the UDL framework within the role of writing centres in post-Covid 21st-century South African higher education. Through professional insights as a qualified practising writing consultant both locally in South Africa and in the United States, this reflective critique on the emerging vociferous dialogue around the adoption of the Universal Design for Learning framework at higher education institutions in South Africa, and its implications for the role of the writing centre, are based on this author’s pragmatic, commonplace experiences as well as research studies conducted on UDL and the Harvard Review. It is hoped that this reflective paper may make visible some of the inherent juxtapositions Universal Design for Learning may hold for meeting individual students’ learning needs principled on its universal approach to learning success for all, affording opportunities for further research and critique.
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