Quintessential UDL Resource
In Teaching Every Student, David Rose and Anne Meyer observe that “…a person who appears learning disabled in a print-bound, text-based environment may look extraordinarily skilled in a graphics or video-based environment.” There are indeed learners for whom video is especially helpful, but I believe that all learners benefit tremendously from access to video. That’s why, in a universally designed learning environment video is made freely available to everyone.
With all the online video that is readily available on almost any subject imaginable, it is a truly wonderful time to be a learner! TechCrunch reported recently that there are now nearly 17 billion video clips online. The challenge, therefore, lies in finding the most useful and highest quality video. WatchKnow does a great deal to help meet this challenge; and it is a resource that should be familiar to anyone who wants to foster a UDL learning environment.
WatchKnow has indexed and organized 18,485 online educational videos as of today. Site organizers aim to increase that total to 50,000 by the end of 2010. All videos have been organized by category and sub-category. For example, the 2,490 videos listed under mathematics have been sub-divided into 15 categories that range from “Number Sense” to “Calculus” and “Math in the Real World”.
WatchKnow has been organized as a Web 2.0 community where input is welcome from all. Users are encouraged to add videos. Since WatchKnow is funded by a foundation, however, teachers and librarians have been hired to edit the directory. Each video is accompanied by a description, age level information and rating. Access to videos does not require registration, but you must register if you wish to add videos to the collection.
Larry Sanger, the co-founder of Wikipedia, is the executive director of WatchKnow. He offers an overview of WatchKnow in the video below.


June 20, 2010 at 7:58 pm
Thanks for the blog plug!
I just wanted to observe that we have a heck of a lot more than 15 subcategories under Mathematics. We’ve got hundreds. Keep clicking the plusses!
An upcoming redesign should make the richness of our directory a little more obvious (I hope).
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