Student diversity is becoming the rule rather than the exception in education systems across the world. Students bring to classroom different characteristics such as ability and disability, socio-economic background, race, ethnicity, and cultural background, beliefs and religion, and gender characteristics. The United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goal 4 aims to ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and promote lifelong learning opportunities for all (United Nations, 2015).
However, creating inclusive quality education for all remains a ubiquitous challenge faced by educators faced with increasing student diversity. And certain groups of students are more likely to experience barriers to access, participate and success in education.
During this course, you will:
Develop a critical understanding of the concepts and assumptions about diversity and difference, including notions of ability and disability, socio-economic background, race, ethnicity, and cultural background, beliefs and religion, and gender.
Develop awareness of historical and contemporary definitions of inclusive education, taking into account policy, theories and models.
Develop the ability to critically analyse contexts in order to identify barriers to developing inclusive and equitable quality education for all learners.
Develop knowledge about ways to develop inclusive and equitable quality education for all learners, taking into account their diverse characteristics and needs.
Welcome to the first module of the course. In this week, you’ll begin by exploring what we mean by diversity and difference in education, and how these ideas shape our assumptions about learners. Together, we’ll unpack key concepts such as the “imagined student,” labelling, and representation, and examine how education systems have historically defined and categorised learners.
As you move through the activities, you’ll encounter a range of perspectives and lived experiences. Take your time to engage with these thoughtfully—there are no right or wrong answers, but rather opportunities to question, reflect, and deepen your understanding.
Conceptualising difference and Assumptions about difference•5 minutes
The importance of representation with Dr. Julie McAdam•10 minutes
End of week 1•1 minute
8 readings•Total 80 minutes
Overview of the course•10 minutes
The course staff•10 minutes
About you - External Questionnaire (Optional)•10 minutes
Questionnaire debrief - Q&A session with Dr. Ines Alves•10 minutes
Diversity or difference?•10 minutes
'Idiot, educationally subnormal, and delicate' - The emergence of categorisation •10 minutes
Special Educational Needs and the influence of policy•10 minutes
Person-First Language (PFL) or Identity-First Language (IFL)•10 minutes
2 assignments•Total 60 minutes
End of week Quiz•30 minutes
Practice Quiz•30 minutes
5 discussion prompts•Total 70 minutes
Tell us about you...•10 minutes
Your experiences completing the questionnaire•10 minutes
What does student diversity mean to you?•10 minutes
Who is the imagined student in your classroom?•10 minutes
Which labels are used in your context?•30 minutes
Week 2: Responding to diversity in education
Module 2•4 hours to complete
Module details
In this module, you’ll explore what it means to move from exclusion to inclusion in education. Building on the concepts from Week 1, you will examine how inclusion is understood in practice, and how education systems respond to diverse learner needs.
You’ll engage with key frameworks and global perspectives on inclusive education, including policy approaches and guiding principles. Along the way, you’ll reflect on your own understanding of inclusion and consider how it may be shaped—or challenged—by different contexts and experiences.
UNESCO Global Education Monitoring Report 2020: Inclusion and Education•3 minutes
The European Agency for Special Needs and Inclusive Education Vision for Inclusive Education Systems•2 minutes
UNESCO: A world of Inclusion•21 minutes
Dilemmas of Difference•4 minutes
End of Week 2•1 minute
8 readings•Total 95 minutes
The 4 pillars of Inclusion by the International Bureau of Education •20 minutes
The core features of inclusive education •10 minutes
Right to Education•15 minutes
UNCRPD and General Comment 4•10 minutes
Inclusive education in Scotland - compulsory education policies•10 minutes
Higher Education: Equality Act 2010•10 minutes
Cali commitment to equity and inclusion in education•10 minutes
A​ssessment•10 minutes
3 assignments•Total 90 minutes
End of Week Quiz•30 minutes
Responding to student diversity from exclusion to inclusion - AI Graded assignment•30 minutes
Practice Quiz•30 minutes
4 discussion prompts•Total 40 minutes
What does inclusion in education mean to you?•10 minutes
Did your country sign the UN CRPD?•10 minutes
Inclusion in education: Has your definition changed?•10 minutes
Have you experienced dilemmas when responding to diversity?•10 minutes
Week 3: Experiencing diversity in education: barriers and facilitators
Module 3•5 hours to complete
Module details
In this module, you’ll explore how diversity is experienced in real educational contexts, with a focus on the barriers and facilitators that shape inclusion. You’ll be introduced to different ways of understanding disability—particularly the medical, social, and biopsychosocial models—and consider how these influence educational practices and responses.
As you move through the module, you’ll examine how environments, systems, and attitudes can either enable or restrict participation and learning.
The International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health•7 minutes
Barriers and facilitators to learning in Museums•7 minutes
End of week 3•1 minute
12 readings•Total 120 minutes
Is the medical model still applied?•10 minutes
Social Model of Disability•10 minutes
The biopsychosocial approach•10 minutes
Legal duty to remove the barriers?•10 minutes
What is pupil voice?•10 minutes
Do students need to learn in traditional class environments? by Eilidh Murphy•10 minutes
'Disability is something to be overcome, hushed, not spoken about' by Amber•10 minutes
Is the secondary school system ableist? by Jack and Beth•10 minutes
Being Part Time in Education by Amber•10 minutes
Imposter Syndrome: Bisexuality, Cerebral Palsy and Avoiding Labels by Izzy•10 minutes
Sure, I go by Sam•10 minutes
Embracing my Disabled Identity in Sixth Form by Sophie•10 minutes
3 assignments•Total 90 minutes
End of Week Quiz•30 minutes
Student voice - AI Graded Assignment•30 minutes
Practice Quiz•30 minutes
2 discussion prompts•Total 40 minutes
Have you ever felt different? Did you feel included or excluded?•10 minutes
Medical, Social, biopsychosocial?•30 minutes
Week 4: Developing inclusive, equitable quality education for All
Module 4•4 hours to complete
Module details
In this module, you’ll focus on how to put inclusion into practice. You will explore different responses to student diversity and their role in developing inclusive education: inclusive educators, individualised planning, differentiation, inclusive Pedagogies, Universal Design for Learning. It also provides a short introduction to the challenges and resources to teaching different groups of students.
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Reviewed on Jun 21, 2022
super informative ... It is exactly what i was looking for.
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I have gained knowledge from this course that will truly help me provide inclusive and quality education to my students.
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Reviewed on Feb 16, 2024
Interesting- the information taught in this course is needed in all American schools
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