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Extending “Beyond Diversity”: Culturally Responsive Universal Design Principles for Medical Education

Erica Odukoya, Tatiana Kelley, Barra Madden, Felicia Olawuni, Erica Maduakolam, Anna T. Cianciolo

2021Teaching and Learning in Medicine16 citationsDOI

Abstract

This commentary follows up on Maduakolam et al. (2020) “Beyond Diversity: Envisioning Inclusion in Medical Education Research and Practice,” which introduced Culturally Responsive Universal Design for Learning (CRUDL) as an approach to accounting for learner diversity in educational theory development and curriculum design. We flesh out the principles of CRUDL, using publications in this issue of Teaching and Learning in Medicine as case examples for how the principles work in action. With this scholarly thought exercise, we seek to demonstrate the feasibility and promise of curriculum that is accountable to diverse learners and the impact of historical trauma. We also explore how research inclusive of diverse social identities could inform curriculum design by identifying how social identity, learning environment, educational activities, and learner engagement interact to produce diverse learning experiences and performance. Scholarly thought exercises such as this one may help bridge the gap between professed ideals and action with respect to inclusive medical education; CRUDL principles provide a helpful framework for planning and evaluating accountable curriculum design.

Topics & Concepts

CurriculumInclusion (mineral)Diversity (politics)Engineering ethicsAction (physics)PedagogyUniversal Design for LearningBridge (graph theory)SociologyIdentity (music)MedicineSocial scienceEngineeringAnthropologyInternal medicinePhysicsQuantum mechanicsAcousticsInnovations in Medical EducationMedical Education and AdmissionsEmpathy and Medical Education
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