Metadata
Title
Education resources
Category
undergraduate
UUID
81da1a92cce84040b4aa039558f35ea2
Source URL
https://www.disabilityinnovation.unsw.edu.au/inclusive-education/education-resou...
Parent URL
https://www.disabilityinnovation.unsw.edu.au/
Crawl Time
2026-03-10T04:43:35+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Education resources

Source: https://www.disabilityinnovation.unsw.edu.au/inclusive-education/education-resources Parent: https://www.disabilityinnovation.unsw.edu.au/

Universal Design for Learning (UDL) 3.0

Design learning that welcomes identity, reduces barriers and sustains rigorous achievement. This page translates UDL 3.0 into practical actions at UNSW with examples, templates and policy alignment.

Universal Design for Learning (UDL) at UNSW

What is UDL?

Universal Design for Learning (UDL) is an educational framework that focuses on improving teaching and learning for all people, grounded in neuroscience and learning sciences. UDL acknowledges that there is no "average" learner variability as the norm and therefore curricula must be designed to support this diversity from the outset.

At UNSW and across the Australian higher education sector, UDL is applied to ensure learning environments are inclusive, equitable and aligned with AQF Level 7-9 standards. This includes learners with disability, culturally and linguistically diverse students, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander learners, mature-age learners, international students and those with complex personal or socio-economic circumstances.

UDL 3.0 in the Australian HE context

The 2024 update of the Universal Design for Learning (UDL) Guidelines 3.0 expands the framework beyond access and inclusion toward identity-conscious design. It recognises that every learner’s cultural, linguistic and social identity shapes how they engage, perceive and express learning. This aligns with UNSW’s Progress for All Strategy, which commits to learning environments that value belonging, authenticity and collective agency.

In this model, identity is not an add-on but a dimension of variability. At UNSW we endeavour to create learning experiences for the whole learner, not only to remove physical or cognitive barriers, but also to address barriers embedded in systems, assumptions and language.

UNSW Teaching Gateway - change

The gateway provides a context for effective applications of UDL guidelines at UNSW, starting with small changes that maximise inclusivity. You will find information on UDL practices at UNSW and the framework’s contextualisation of UDL in the Australian HE context. These resources have been compiled by UNSW UDL Guild with the support of Guild members and non-members.

The goal of UDL 3.0 at UNSW

The aim of UDL is to develop learner agency by enabling students to act with purpose, reflection and autonomy in achieving their learning goals. At UNSW our learners are:

This is achieved by shifting focus from "fixing the learner" to designing accessible environments that anticipate barriers before they arise.

UDL 3.0 in the Australian context


The Who of learning in HE Australian context

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander knowledges

In the Australian context, intersectionality must engage with the sovereignty and epistemic authority of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. As Bunda et al. (2025) assert, educators must centre Indigenous voices, laws and Country, not merely include them as cultural content. This perspective echoes Abdilla et al.’s Out of the Black Box: Indigenous Protocols for AI (2021), which calls for relational accountability, respect for Country and Indigenous data sovereignty as ethical imperatives for design.

Applying intersectionality through a diverse lens requires UDL practice to:

The Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Protocols (2023) state, observing cultural protocols and language sovereignty “acknowledges and accepts our shared past and lays the groundwork for mutual respect and shared responsibility for our land”.

This aligns with the UNSW Indigenous Strategy and a design justice approach to curriculum.

UDL 3.0 at UNSW: Intersectionality Matters

UDL 3.0 at UNSW: a natural alignment

The UDL Guidelines 3.0 explicitly expand to include the who of learning, recognising identity and culture as intrinsic to learner variability. When applied intersectionally, UDL invites educators to:

This alignment calls on educators to shift from remediation toward design justice, identifying and addressing barriers located in the learning environment rather than the learner.

Dismantling structural barriers for equitable participation


UDL principles in practice

Multiple Means of Engagement WHY

Multiple Means of Representation WHAT

Multiple Means of Action & Expression HOW


Benefits of UDL

For educators

For learners

UDL “reduces barriers while maintaining high achievement standards” (CAST, 2024). Sustainable inclusion requires staff capability building (Jwad et al., 2023).


UNSW UDL applications and resources - possible

UNSW UDL Guild

The UNSW UDL Guild has adopted a contextualised UDL 3.0 framework drawing on CAST guidance while embedding:

Many UNSW educators already implement UDL‑consistent practices such as lecture recordings, flexible assessments, scaffolded literacy support and culturally aware learning design.

Join the UNSW UDL Guild (Teams)

Inclusive Teaching and Equity Hub

Designed as a ‘one-stop shop’ for UNSW staff to develop their inclusive practice. The space links to a range of quality resources both within and beyond UNSW and provides a range of tips and tricks for implementing new strategies in the tertiary learning environment.

Visit the Inclusive Teaching and Equity Hub


References (APA 7th)

Resources for inclusive education

UNSW Teaching Gateway’s Universal Design for Learning

Universal Design for Learning (UDL) is a set of principles for curriculum development that give all individuals equal opportunities to learn. UDL guides the creation of learning outcomes, resources and assessments that work for everyone. 

This approach is underpinned by research in the field of neuroscience and is designed to improve the learning experience and outcomes for all students, including students with disabilities, students from diverse cultural and socio-economic backgrounds, mature students and international students.

Watch the online recording now and then check out the other videos and framework below.

More on UDL

To find out more about UDL a series of short videos provide an introduction to what UDL is and why we should apply it, emphasising the importance of flexibility in teaching to support variability in learning.

A downloadable framework has also been produced as the result of a review of the current literature and practice materials conducted on the use of Universal Design for Learning (UDL) in higher education. The results of the review indicated that students perceived that the use of UDL principles in their coursework enhanced and supported their learning.

Inclusive Education Showcase 2025

In September 2025, UNSW educators who teach inclusively present their work at this showcase, followed by a Q&A. The showcase is a unique opportunity for the UNSW teaching community to learn about different inclusive technologies and practices and how to incorporate them into their teaching and learning to make them more accessible.

Watch the online recording, closed captions available.

6th Inclusive Education Showcase

09 Oct 2025

Scientia Education Academy Lecture

Promoting inclusivity through universally designed learning environments.

Watch nowchevron_right

Connections Seminar: 10 ideas to improve educational equity

In this seminar, Dr Sue O’Neill will provide a brief overview of UDL and share 10 ideas that course instructors can do now to improve the accessibility of their course materials. Sue will demonstrate how to improve your Moodle site and course materials including text-based materials, audio-visual, and visual/graphics.

Find out morechevron_right

UDL on Campus

UDL On Campus is a collection of resources developed by CAST geared towards multiple stakeholders within postsecondary institutions, including instructional designers, faculty, policy makers, and administrators.

Find out morechevron_right

More resources

Watch webinars and download guidelines and fact sheets produced to help share knowledge that is interdisciplinary, innovative and inclusive through research and education.

Our past events are available as webinar videos with Auslan and closed captions.