Planning K-8 Computer Science through the UDL Framework

Authors

  • Maya Israel University of Illinois-Urbana Champaign
  • Lionel Bergeron Dept. Affiliation, School/Corp.
  • Todd Lash University of Illinois-Urbana Champaign
  • Meg Ray Cornell Tech

Keywords:

K-12 Computer Science Education

Abstract

Due to the historic underrepresentation of women, people with disabilities, and people from a broad range of cultural and socioeconomic backgrounds in computer science (CS), there is growing demand to provide CS opportunities in K12 settings. As a result, school districts are beginning to implement CS For All initiatives. Consequently, there are increasing demands on teachers to find ways of making CS instruction accessible and engaging to a broad range of learners. Unfortunately, few resources exist to guide teachers in how to engage a broad range of learners in CS instruction. This paper describes the rationale for using the UDL framework for designing K-8 CS instruction as well as preliminary findings from a National Science Foundation STEM+C study that examines instructional strategies that support students with disabilities and other struggling learners through Universal Design for Learning (UDL). Secondly, this paper describes the collaborative efforts between the Creative Technology Research Lab (CTRL) and New York City’s K12 CS For All initiative in support of teachers in implementing universally designed CS instruction across grades K-8. Lastly, this paper provides resources developed through these initiatives. Implications for practice and future research directions will be shared.

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Published

2018-04-26

Issue

Section

Research Articles

How to Cite

Planning K-8 Computer Science through the UDL Framework. (2018). Journal of Human and Connected Computing, 10(1). https://journals.ku.edu/hcc/article/view/12002