We value your privacy

We use cookies to enhance your browsing experience, serve personalised ads or content, and analyse our traffic. By clicking "Accept All", you consent to our use of cookies.

CustomiseReject AllAccept All

Powered by [Visit CookieYes website](https://www.cookieyes.com/product/cookie-consent/?ref=cypbcyb&utm_source=cookie-banner&utm_medium=fl-branding)

Customise Consent Preferences

We use cookies to help you navigate efficiently and perform certain functions. You will find detailed information about all cookies under each consent category below.

The cookies that are categorised as "Necessary" are stored on your browser as they are essential for enabling the basic functionalities of the site. ... Show more

NecessaryAlways Active

Necessary cookies are required to enable the basic features of this site, such as providing secure log-in or adjusting your consent preferences. These cookies do not store any personally identifiable data.

- Cookie

nabSegmentation

- Duration

4 months

- Description

Description is currently not available.

- Cookie

rc::a

- Duration

Never Expires

- Description

This cookie is set by the Google recaptcha service to identify bots to protect the website against malicious spam attacks.

- Cookie

wpEmojiSettingsSupports

- Duration

session

- Description

WordPress sets this cookie when a user interacts with emojis on a WordPress site. It helps determine if the user's browser can display emojis properly.

- Cookie

rc::c

- Duration

session

- Description

This cookie is set by the Google recaptcha service to identify bots to protect the website against malicious spam attacks.

- Cookie

VISITOR\_PRIVACY\_METADATA

- Duration

6 months

- Description

YouTube sets this cookie to store the user's cookie consent state for the current domain.

- Cookie

\_GRECAPTCHA

- Duration

1 year

- Description

Google Recaptcha

- Cookie

NID

- Duration

1 year

- Description

Google Recaptcha NID

Functional

Functional cookies help perform certain functionalities like sharing the content of the website on social media platforms, collecting feedback, and other third-party features.

- Cookie

VISITOR\_INFO1\_LIVE

- Duration

6 months

- Description

A cookie set by YouTube to measure bandwidth that determines whether the user gets the new or old player interface.

- Cookie

yt-remote-connected-devices

- Duration

Never Expires

- Description

YouTube sets this cookie to store the user's video preferences using embedded YouTube videos.

- Cookie

ytidb::LAST\_RESULT\_ENTRY\_KEY

- Duration

Never Expires

- Description

The cookie ytidb::LAST\_RESULT\_ENTRY\_KEY is used by YouTube to store the last search result entry that was clicked by the user. This information is used to improve the user experience by providing more relevant search results in the future.

- Cookie

yt-remote-device-id

- Duration

Never Expires

- Description

YouTube sets this cookie to store the user's video preferences using embedded YouTube videos.

- Cookie

yt-remote-session-name

- Duration

session

- Description

The yt-remote-session-name cookie is used by YouTube to store the user's video player preferences using embedded YouTube video.

- Cookie

yt-remote-fast-check-period

- Duration

session

- Description

The yt-remote-fast-check-period cookie is used by YouTube to store the user's video player preferences for embedded YouTube videos.

- Cookie

yt-remote-session-app

- Duration

session

- Description

The yt-remote-session-app cookie is used by YouTube to store user preferences and information about the interface of the embedded YouTube video player.

- Cookie

yt-remote-cast-available

- Duration

session

- Description

The yt-remote-cast-available cookie is used to store the user's preferences regarding whether casting is available on their YouTube video player.

- Cookie

yt-remote-cast-installed

- Duration

session

- Description

The yt-remote-cast-installed cookie is used to store the user's video player preferences using embedded YouTube video.

Analytics

Analytical cookies are used to understand how visitors interact with the website. These cookies help provide information on metrics such as the number of visitors, bounce rate, traffic source, etc.

- Cookie

\_ga\_\*

- Duration

1 year 1 month 4 days

- Description

Google Analytics sets this cookie to store and count page views.

- Cookie

\_ga

- Duration

1 year 1 month 4 days

- Description

Google Analytics sets this cookie to calculate visitor, session and campaign data and track site usage for the site's analytics report. The cookie stores information anonymously and assigns a randomly generated number to recognise unique visitors.

- Cookie

\_hjSessionUser\_\*

- Duration

1 year

- Description

Hotjar sets this cookie to ensure data from subsequent visits to the same site is attributed to the same user ID, which persists in the Hotjar User ID, which is unique to that site.

- Cookie

\_hjSession\_\*

- Duration

1 hour

- Description

- Cookie

\_gid

- Duration

1 day

- Description

Google Analytics sets this cookie to store information on how visitors use a website while also creating an analytics report of the website's performance. Some of the collected data includes the number of visitors, their source, and the pages they visit anonymously.

- Cookie

YSC

- Duration

session

- Description

YSC cookie is set by Youtube and is used to track the views of embedded videos on Youtube pages.

Performance

Performance cookies are used to understand and analyse the key performance indexes of the website which helps in delivering a better user experience for the visitors.

- Cookie

\_gat

- Duration

1 minute

- Description

Google Universal Analytics sets this cookie to restrain request rate and thus limit data collection on high-traffic sites.

Advertisement

Advertisement cookies are used to provide visitors with customised advertisements based on the pages you visited previously and to analyse the effectiveness of the ad campaigns.

- Cookie

\_\_Secure-YEC

- Duration

past

- Description

YouTube sets this cookie to stores the user's video player preferences using embedded YouTube video

- Cookie

uid

- Duration

Never Expires

- Description

Set by publuu

- Cookie

\_\_Secure-YNID

- Duration

6 months

- Description

Google cookie used to protect user security and prevent fraud, especially during the login process.

- Cookie

\_\_Secure-ROLLOUT\_TOKEN

- Duration

6 months

- Description

YouTube sets this cookie to manage feature rollout and experimentation. It helps Google control which new features or interface changes are shown to users as part of testing and staged rollouts, ensuring consistent experience for a given user during an experiment.

Uncategorised

Other uncategorised cookies are those that are being analysed and have not been classified into a category as yet.

No cookies to display.

Reject AllSave My PreferencesAccept All

Powered by [Visit CookieYes website](https://www.cookieyes.com/product/cookie-consent/?ref=cypbcyb&utm_source=cookie-banner&utm_medium=sl-branding)

[Skip to main content](https://brookespublishing.com/author-qa-with-loui-lord-nelson-on-the-new-design-and-deliver/#content)

# Author Q&A with Loui Lord Nelson on the new Design and Deliver

Universal Design for Learning (UDL) is the premier educational framework for making learning accessible to all, and since 2014, Loui Lord Nelson’s engagingly written and research-based _Design and Deliver_ has been the go-to UDL primer for busy teachers looking to consistently promote better outcomes for every learner. With the release of the **[eagerly anticipated second edition of _Design and Deliver_](https://products.brookespublishing.com/Design-and-Deliver-P1237.aspx)** just days away, we asked Dr. Nelson to join us for a short Q&A covering the most valuable new additions to the book, what she would say to teachers who are hesitant to start their UDL journeys during turbulent times, and more.

### 1\. Your first edition of Design and Deliver was a landmark UDL resource, and we couldn’t be more excited about the new edition. What would you say are the most valuable additions and updates you’ve made to the book this time around?

Thank you. I have been amazed and honored by the response to the first edition. When I began designing the second edition, I knew I wanted it to be more interactive and conversational. There was the obvious part of identifying research that had come out since 2013-–2014, but I wanted to create a voice that invited the reader in and kept them interested. UDL has significant depth, and I hope to encourage educators to dive into it with excitement and wonder. I knew I needed to provide that scaffolding in a variety of ways.

As for specific content, I was happy to tuck in question sets throughout the chapters and activities at the end of the chapters that I’ve used in trainings over the years. In retrospect, everything in the book has been applied in some form with educators across the world. I kept and improved on the activities based on feedback and some of those ended up in this edition.

### 2\. How did the realities of the COVID-19 pandemic affect your process as you worked on the new edition of Design and Deliver? Was the new information about online learning directly inspired by the pandemic, or had you already planned to include more on virtual instruction?

Oh, COVID-19 has thrown us all through a loop! From the migration of face-to-face to digital learning to hybrid settings and back again (in some cases), it has tossed the lives of all educators around. I’ve had the analogy of a rock tumbler in my head for a while. People who are rock hounds collect all sorts of rocks and want to polish them, so they put them into a tumbler which has the same motion as a standard clothes drier. The rocks tumble around with some abrasive grit and water. That sounds aggressive and painful, but the rocks come out beautifully polished. In my head, we’re all rocks. The grit and the water are everything we’ve been tumbling through. My hope is to come out more polished after months of being tumbled.

Part of that polish comes from continued learning, which is what the process of this revised edition gave me. I spent time searching for, reading, listening to, reflecting on, digesting, and assimilating the updated research behind the guidelines as well as the entire framework. I loved it. Honestly, _**Design and Deliver**_ was part of my COVID-19 stay-sane plan.

As for the technology tips, I actually had the idea for them at the very beginning of 2020. I had started to play around with the idea, but the pandemic definitely made the idea more relevant and important. Even more important was framing the tips so readers understood that all decisions, including what technology to use in the classroom, should be guided by the framework and the curriculum. Curriculum, in the UDL sphere, is made up of the goals, methods, materials, and assessment. The goal should drive the other three areas, which means the goal should drive what technology you’re making available to the students and how you envision them using it. When you understand what your students need to achieve, you can offer the right technology to support that journey. My goal was to offer technology tips that helped educators find that line of thinking and stick with it.

### 3\. Can you talk a little about the online materials that accompany the book? What have you included to help educators design instruction using UDL principles?

Online materials are always a little risky to put in a print book. Links to digital resources shift pretty rapidly, so my focus was to identify (a) resources that have been stable over time, or (b) resources I controlled. Based on the latter, the most frequently used online resources are interviews from my podcast, [UDL in 15 Minutes](https://theudlapproach.com/podcasts/). I interview educators from around the world about their implementation of UDL. Each story is unique and each story is rich because teachers are the best storytellers. And because the number of podcast episodes will continue to grow, readers will always have new content.

Other online materials include links to specific spots in websites (e.g., within the CAST website). My hope is to get the readers into certain sites so they get to know them and see them as a resource. If Design and Deliver can be a springboard to the work of others, that will make me extremely happy.

### Companion Materials

Designing instruction with UDL is easier than ever with these online resources, available as printable downloads, that come with your purchase of the new _Design and Deliver_: CAST UDL Guidelines; an Identifying Your Resources chart; a UDL design cycle graphic; a UDL lesson plan flowchart; and classroom resource mapping charts for elementary, middle, and high school teachers.

### 4\. Teachers who are new to UDL may be intimidated by the thought of starting their UDL journey in this turbulent time period, when remote or hybrid learning is complicating the way we teach and learn. What would you say to teachers who fear it isn’t the “right time” to start exploring and embracing UDL?

Learning anything that is new takes energy. Many educators, if not most, are exhausted right now because they have spent a great deal of energy learning how to teach in a completely different context. And that context hasn’t stayed the same for many teachers. Most shifted to full online teaching, some shifted back to some form of face-to-face, and some switch between the two. That has turned planning and teaching on its ear. That said, I love efficiency. I love identifying a system that helps me make effective decisions in the moment. We all need efficiency right now and I believe the UDL framework provides that.

Before diving into the graphic organizer (also referred to as The Guidelines), I suggest educators learn about variability. This concept, which comes from the neurosciences, tells us that all learners learn differently and every learner learns differently based on the context. For example, a learner might do well in one context (e.g., digital), but might not perform as well on the same material when in another context (e.g., face to face). That child is demonstrating their variability.

In conjunction with variability, I like to introduce the concept of expert learning. This is an understanding that learning goes beyond memorization and even creativity (e.g., Bloom’s Taxonomy). Expert learners guide their connection to learning, they understand how to use what is around them to gain the knowledge they seek, and they understand how to set themselves up for successful learning. They don’t start there, though. They need experiences, feedback, and guidance to help them grow. Those experiences are woven throughout the UDL guidelines and checkpoints.

After that, it does not matter where someone starts. I always like the top row of the current UDL graphic which has the guidelines of Recruiting Interest, Perception, and Physical Action across the top. I call those the “welcome mat.” Educators who use these guidelines to make instructional decisions are much more likely to create an inclusive space that welcomes all learners. By using these guidelines as a tool for decision-making, you’re planning for variability up front. Each checkpoint makes you think more deeply and holistically about all of your learners across contexts from the get-go, saving time on the backend.

### 5\. In your new edition, you share brief anecdotes from teachers who have successfully applied a UDL lens to their lesson planning. Can you share one of your favorite UDL success stories?

Like it or not, I’m not one to have favorites. Instead, I like to think about the patterns of success I see. Those patterns include innate curiosity, a desire to learn, apply, reflect, and shift, and strong skills in communication. These individuals recognize positive shifts in practice and enjoy talking about them and sharing them.

I’ve been in education long enough to hear about the “pendulum.” For example, my elementary program provided [Individually Guided Education](https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED274421). There was a heavy focus on student-led learning and choice, cross-subject units, and goal-setting. Much of that is woven into UDL, so it would be easy to say that the pendulum has swung back. But that isn’t right. A pendulum is linear—it moves back and forth. The vastness of research that impacts education does not create a linear pattern. Just the field of neuroscience, a foundational component of UDL, is multi-faceted. Growth is more like an expanding sphere, pushing out in all directions, building on the old and occasionally pulling some of that with it, but also leaving a lot of it behind because of new findings.

Whether they are in the classroom, leading a school, or leading a district, when I see educators who allow their curiosity to propel them into learning—and follow that with the risk-taking of application, reflection on that risk-taking, and then shifting their practice—I know they are going to embrace UDL. I also know they will want to share the framework with others and find ways to send others down that path. These are the innovators who create rich learning environments for students and colleagues. These are the educators who truly change lives. If you read the different anecdotes throughout the book, you will see these characteristics in each of those educators. That’s why I can’t identify a favorite. They are all life changers.

* * *

## Interested in learning more?

### Design and Deliver

#### Planning and Teaching Using Universal Design for Learning, Second Edition

Universal Design for Learning (UDL) is the best way to teach all students effectively and break down barriers to learning—but how can busy teachers get started with UDL right now? Find the answers in the second edition of this bestselling, teacher-trusted primer, created by internationally recognized UDL expert Loui Lord Nelson.

[Learn More](https://products.brookespublishing.com/Design-and-Deliver-P1237.aspx)

### More Resources

- **Read a free excerpt from the book**. [Chapter 1: Introducing Universal Design for Learning](https://brookespublishing.com/resource-library/design-and-deliver-planning-and-teaching-using-universal-design-for-learning-second-edition-excerpt/)
- **Discover what’s new**. Download [this handout](https://brookespublishing.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/Nelson-2e_WhatsNewF.pdf) for a quick look.
- **Read a guest blog post by Loui Lord Nelson**. [UDL and Self-Regulation During Distance Learning](https://blog.brookespublishing.com/guest-post-udl-and-self-regulation-during-distance-learning/)

- [_Facebook_](http://www.facebook.com/brookespublishingco)
- [_Twitter_](https://twitter.com/BrookesPubCo)
- [_Pinterest_](http://pinterest.com/brookespubco/)
- [_Blog_](http://blog.brookespublishing.com/)

**Brookes Publishing**
P.O. Box 10624

Baltimore, MD 21285-0624

Phone:
1-800-638-3775

Fax:
410-337-8539

- [Screening & Assessment](https://brookespublishing.com/screening-assessment/)
- [Teaching & Intervention](https://brookespublishing.com/teaching-intervention/)  - [Early Childhood](https://brookespublishing.com/teaching-intervention/early-childhood/)
  - [Literacy](https://brookespublishing.com/teaching-intervention/literacy/)
  - [Communication & Language](https://brookespublishing.com/teaching-intervention/communication-language/)
  - [Special Education](https://brookespublishing.com/teaching-intervention/special-education/)
  - [Social-Emotional Development](https://brookespublishing.com/teaching-intervention/social-emotional-development/)
  - [Multilingual Education](https://brookespublishing.com/teaching-intervention/multilingual-education/)
- [Resources](https://brookespublishing.com/resources/)  - [Resource Library](https://brookespublishing.com/resources/resource-library/)
  - [Catalogs](https://brookespublishing.com/resources/catalogs/)
  - [Newsletters](https://brookespublishing.com/resources/newsletters/)
  - [Blog](https://blog.brookespublishing.com/)
  - [Webinars](https://brookespublishing.com/resource-library/?fwp_type=webinars)
- [Support](https://brookespublishing.com/support/)  - [How to Order](https://brookespublishing.com/support/how-to-order/)
  - [Faculty Support](https://brookespublishing.com/support/faculty-support/)
  - [Training](https://brookespublishing.com/support/training/)
  - [Download Hub](https://downloads.brookespublishing.com/)
  - [Product Support](https://brookespublishing.com/support/product-support/)
  - [Permissions](https://brookespublishing.com/support/permissions/)
  - [Contact](https://brookespublishing.com/support/contact/)
  - [Publish with Brookes](https://brookespublishing.com/support/publish-with-brookes/)
- [About](https://brookespublishing.com/about/)  - [Leadership](https://brookespublishing.com/about/leadership/)
  - [History](https://brookespublishing.com/about/history/)
  - [News & Events](https://brookespublishing.com/about/news-events/)
  - [Careers](https://brookespublishing.com/about/careers/)

- [Contact](https://brookespublishing.com/support/contact/)
- [Store](https://products.brookespublishing.com/)
- [Login](https://products.brookespublishing.com/Login.aspx)
- [Cart](https://products.brookespublishing.com/Basket.aspx)

© Copyright
2026
Paul H. Brookes Publishing Co., Inc. All Rights Reserved.

[Permissions](https://brookespublishing.com/support/permissions) [Privacy Policy](https://brookespublishing.com/privacy-policy)

reCAPTCHA

Recaptcha requires verification.

[Privacy](https://www.google.com/intl/en/policies/privacy/) \- [Terms](https://www.google.com/intl/en/policies/terms/)

protected by **reCAPTCHA**

[Privacy](https://www.google.com/intl/en/policies/privacy/) \- [Terms](https://www.google.com/intl/en/policies/terms/)
