ADCET
ADCET
AI and Accessibility in Education - A Paradigm Shift
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AI & Education at a Crossroads
Speaker 1You know , it really strikes me how we're at this fascinating crossroads in education right now . It feels a bit like where we were maybe decades ago . There's all this buzz around generative AI and it reminds me of the excitement around universal design for learning UDL when that first came on the scene .
Speaker 2That's a great parallel . Yeah , it really is that feeling of a potentially huge shift , isn't ?
Speaker 1it yeah .
Speaker 2We're looking today at the abstract for a keynote speech . It's for the ADC UDL conference in Sydney .
Speaker 1Okay .
Speaker 2And the main theme is navigating these big changes AI is bringing for learning , teaching , assessment , basically making things inclusive .
Speaker 1Right . So our mission today is really to unpack that , to try and grasp the key things we need to consider as AI kind of reshapes education , especially looking back at UDL , and we've got two versions of the abstracts , slightly different wording , so we'll try to catch those
Universal Design for Learning Origins
Speaker 1nuances . Sounds good , okay , so let's dive in Universal design . That started what about 40 years ago ? Took that idea from architecture designing buildings for everyone .
Speaker 2Exactly .
Speaker 1And brought it into education .
Speaker 2And the really interesting thing was the goal with UDL from the get-go was creating learning environments , materials , everything that just worked for all students .
Speaker 1Yeah .
Speaker 2Right from the start . No retrofitting needed .
Speaker 1And technology was seen as a big part of making that happen , right .
Speaker 2Oh , absolutely . There was a huge belief that technology could be the key to making learning truly accessible for everyone , particularly disabled learners . A really ambitious vision .
AI as a Double-Edged Sword
Speaker 1So fast forward to now or in another one of these big change periods , but this time it's generative AI driving it .
Speaker 2Yeah , and it's touching everything how students actually learn , how teachers approach their lessons , how we even assess understanding . It's a similar kind of upheaval .
Speaker 1And the abstract points out , this is especially significant for learners who might be considered at the margins or learners with disabilities .
Speaker 2Definitely . Both versions really stress this point . They stand to gain potentially the most from AI if it's done right , but they're also maybe the most vulnerable if we mess it up .
Speaker 1Which leads straight to that idea of AI being well a double-edged sword . The abstract uses this phrase turbo-charge , accessibility and inclusion . You can sort of imagine AI creating really personalized learning paths . Can you give us a concrete example Like what would that actually look like ?
Speaker 2Sure . Imagine , say , an AI tool that figures out where a student is struggling with a concept .
Speaker 1Okay .
Speaker 2And then it automatically generates maybe extra practice problems or finds a different video explaining it or simplifies the language , whatever that specific student needs . Yeah , tailored support instantly .
Speaker 1Wow Okay .
Speaker 2But and this is the crucial but- yeah . Alongside that amazing potential , there's this very real danger the abstract flags worsening the inequalities
Collaborative Campus-Wide Approach Needed
Speaker 2that already exist If the tools aren't built with everyone in mind or if only some students can access them .
Speaker 1Then the gap widens .
Speaker 2Precisely , which is why the keynote abstract really hammers home this need to be purposeful about how we use AI . It's not just about adopting the tech .
Speaker 1It needs direction , like serious collaboration across the whole campus .
Speaker 2Exactly that , just about adopting the tech . It needs direction , like serious collaboration across the whole campus . Exactly that Getting different departments , educators , IT folks , disability support services all talking and working together . The goal is joined up strategies .
Speaker 1Not just pockets of innovation .
Speaker 2Right . We need systemic change if we want the impact to be genuinely positive and inclusive . And , crucially , the abstract says we have to put the learner's requirements right at the center of all this planning .
Speaker 1Absolutely . It can't just be about the technology . It has to be about how it serves the students , understanding their actual needs and challenges first , and building networks is key too .
Speaker 2The abstract mentions creating these networks of allies across campus , people who are committed to this .
Speaker 1Because one department or one person can't possibly drive this alone , can they ?
Speaker 2No way . It's about fostering this future-aware learning environment , one that's accessible , feels authentic to students and is truly inclusive , even as the technology keeps racing ahead .
Speaker 1The more accessible version of the abstract also touches on digging into the practical side and the research questions too , right ?
Speaker 2Yes , exploring what this actually means on the ground and what we still need to figure out through research . And it adds another important dimension AI's potential to boost learners' independence
Balancing Promise and Pitfalls
Speaker 2.
Speaker 1How so .
Speaker 2Well , think about tools that help students manage their own learning or access information more easily . It could also improve professional practices for educators . Maybe AI assists with course design or helps provide richer feedback .
Speaker 1Okay . So wrapping this up , the core tension seems to be this huge promise AI holds , echoing those early UDL hopes for technology making education accessible for all .
Speaker 2Immense potential .
Speaker 1But getting there requires real care , intentionality , collaboration , keeping learners front and center . Otherwise we risk making things less equal .
Speaker 2That sums it up perfectly . It's potential versus pitfalls , and the path we take depends on deliberate action .
Speaker 1Which really leads us to a final thought for you , the listener . As AI continues weaving itself into the fabric of education , what specific , concrete actions can you take , maybe in your own work , your studies or within your institution , to help ensure that its benefits become truly universal , actually contributing to a fairer , more equitable learning landscape for every single person ?