Date of Award

Summer 8-2025

Document Type

Dissertation

Degree Name

Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)

Program/Concentration

Workforce and Organizational Development

Committee Director

Michael F. Kosloski

Committee Director

Michelle E. Bartlett

Committee Member

Margaret E. Thornton

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to explore graduate students’ perspectives of Q-methodology to understand their insights on the newly updated Universal Design for Learning (UDL) 3.0 guidelines and how they feel these guidelines support their academic journey. A Q-sort instrument consisting of 36 statements aligned with UDL 3.0 principles was administered to graduate students at the master’s and doctoral levels. Thirty-two participants completed the Q-sort activity, and factor analysis revealed four distinct viewpoints reflecting varied perceptions of UDL’s relevance and impact within graduate education.

Findings indicate areas of consensus among students, particularly regarding the importance of developing student autonomy in learning, providing clear goals and feedback, and offering flexibility in how students engage with course material. Distinguishing viewpoints emerged around concerns related to bias, the universal applicability of the guidelines across diverse educational contexts, and the feasibility of implementation UDL principles in graduate programs. Follow-up interviews with four participants helped to understand their viewpoints on their Q-sort data and offered rationale and lived academic experiences.

The study applied the UDL framework as a lens to interpret how graduate students conceptualize effective learning environments and highlighted the need for greater adaption of UDL strategies for higher education contexts. Implications for graduate curriculum development, instructional design, and future research were discussed, including the need for discipline-specific guidelines and further exploration of UDL’s long-term effects on diverse graduate student populations. While limitations such as sample-size, short-term focus, and the constraints of forced-choice ranking were acknowledged, the findings offer an important contribution to the limited body of research on UDL implementation in graduate education and suggest meaningful pathways for enhancing learner-centered instructional design at advanced academic levels.

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DOI

10.25777/t28k-ee66

ISBN

9798293844647

ORCID

0009-0006-4419-4291

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