ALTITUDE The National Charter for Universal Design in Tertiary Education: Technical Report
Citation:
Banks, J., Burke, K., Cooney, R., Haran, M., Healy, R., Kennedy, A., McHugh, D., Neenan, C., Northridge, J., O'Shaughnessy, T., Plunkett, N., Reale, J., Ryder, D., & Tierney, C., ALTITUDE The National Charter for Universal Design in Tertiary Education: Technical Report, AHEAD Educational Press, March, 2024, 1 - 112Download Item:
Abstract:
Ireland’s education system is at a critical stage in its
development towards inclusion. Greater diversity in
the student population, national and international
policy emphases on the right to an inclusive education
for every learner, and the evolution of technology in
education in recent decades, have drawn attention
to the need for a more inclusive model of education
across all sectors. Within tertiary education, there
is a growing momentum towards an inclusive,
universally designed, and unified sector in both
policy and practice. In Ireland, further and higher
education has, over recent decades, had to reflect on
traditional policies, structures, systems of support, and
pedagogical approaches for students. It is from this
period of reflection that calls for a National Charter in
Universal Design in Tertiary Education, or ALTITUDE,
have arisen. Research shows that Ireland has a robust
national policy commitment to a universal design (UD)
approach, and evidence of engagement of individuals
in professional development and local implementation
is plentiful. Despite these developments, however,
evidence also shows that a commitment to UD is not
evident in the institutional strategies and policies of
many higher education institutions and education and
training boards (Healy et al., 2023).
The ALTITUDE Charter seeks to support institutions to
address this gap and embed UD more sustainably over
time in their structures and practices.
This Technical Report acts as an accompanying
document to ALTITUDE, the National Charter for
Universal Design in Tertiary Education, launched in
the Spring of 2024. The Charter is one of three related
components made up of the Charter itself, this Technical
Report, and an Implementation Toolkit.
The Technical Report is divided into four sections:
1. It provides a contextual overview for the Charter,
outlining the rationale for its development and the
challenges and enablers to an inclusive tertiary
education system in Ireland and internationally.
2. It gives an overview of the origin and development
of the Charter before highlighting the structure
of the Charter, its strategic foundation and four
pillars, aimed at increasing accessibility, flexibility
and usability in tertiary education. The four pillars
include: Teaching and Learning; Supports Services
and Social Engagement; Physical Environment and
Digital Environment.
3. It examines how the Charter aligns with existing
international policies and national policies with a
specific focus on Charter alignment with existing
tertiary education policies and funding mechanisms.
4. The Technical Report concludes with a focus on
Charter implementation and examines how this
Charter can support institutions wishing to create
more inclusive environments for students and staff.
It provides an overview of how institutions can begin
to implement the Charter with the formation of an
Implementation Committee/Working Group and
use of the associated Toolkit. This section concludes
with an overview of the significance of the role of
policy makers and national bodies in supporting
institutions to adopt and implement the Charter.
The cross-sectoral development of the ALTITUDE
Charter and its associated outputs represents a
landmark moment for the tertiary education sector,
signalling its intent to place human diversity at the
heart of its design and delivery.
It commits to a system where all learners are
transformatively included through a universal design
approach, which fosters student success for all.
Underpinning this, is an effort to further operationalise
a culture of shared responsibility for universal design,
access & inclusion, by supporting the development of
organisational structures which foster an ‘everyone’s
business’ approach to inclusion.
By adopting the Charter, tertiary education providers
are invited to build on existing innovative policies
and practices across the sector, using the Charter
as a vehicle for greater coherence and collaboration
on access and inclusion, both within and across
institutions.
Author's Homepage:
http://people.tcd.ie/banksjoDescription:
PUBLISHED
Author: Banks, Joanne
Publisher:
AHEAD Educational PressType of material:
ReportCollections
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Full text availableSubject (TCD):
Inclusive Society , Adult & Continuing Education , Education policy , Higher Education , Inclusive EducationMetadata
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