Every Learner
Deserves to Thrive
Nepal’s classrooms are filled with diverse learners. Some speak Maithili at home. Some have visual impairments. Some learn differently than the textbook expects. UDL gives teachers the tools to reach all of them, in the same classroom, at the same time.
Photo: Nepali teacher with diverse students in classroom
Nepal’s Classrooms Are Diverse.
Our Teaching Methods Should Be Too.
Across Nepal, teachers walk into classrooms with 40 or more students who speak different languages, come from different backgrounds, and learn in different ways. Yet most teaching methods assume every student learns the same way at the same pace.
The result is that too many children sit at the back, fall behind, and eventually disappear from the system entirely. This is not a failure of students. It is a gap in how we support teachers.
Universal Design for Learning is a research-backed framework that helps teachers design flexible lessons from the start, so that no child needs to be rescued later.
Universal Design for Learning
in Three Principles
UDL is not about making things easier. It is about making learning accessible to everyone without lowering expectations for anyone.
Multiple Means of Engagement
Why students learn. Give learners different ways to connect with, stay motivated by, and find meaning in what they are studying.
Multiple Means of Representation
What students learn. Present information through text, visuals, audio, and demonstration so every learner can access it.
Multiple Means of Action & Expression
How students show learning. Let learners demonstrate what they know through drawing, speaking, writing, or building, not only written tests.
This Is for You
Whether you are a classroom teacher in Jumla or a school principal in Lalitpur, there is something here for you.
I am a Teacher
You care about your students and you want every one of them to succeed. We give you free, practical tools and training designed specifically for Nepali classrooms. No jargon. No theory that does not translate to your Monday morning.
Explore Resources for Teachers →I Lead a School
Building an inclusive school culture takes more than one good teacher. We work with school leadership teams to embed UDL across grades and subjects, creating lasting change rather than one-off workshops.
Explore School Partnership Programs →I am a Parent or Advocate
Every child deserves a classroom that works for them. If you are supporting a child with a disability, a language difference, or a learning challenge, UDL is a framework that fights for them too.
Learn How UDL Supports Your Child →Free Resources, Ready to Use
All of our resources are free, available in Nepali and English, and designed for the realities of classrooms across Nepal.
UDL Lesson Plan Template for Primary Grades
A step-by-step template that helps teachers build lessons with multiple means of engagement, representation, and expression built in from the start.
↓ Download FreeInclusive Classroom Self-Assessment Tool
A simple checklist for teachers to reflect on how inclusive their current classroom practice is and identify three immediate steps to improve.
↓ Download FreeIntroduction to UDL: A Guide for Nepali Educators
A beginner-friendly guide explaining what UDL is, where it comes from, and how it applies directly to classrooms in Nepal. Ideal for first-time learners.
↓ Download FreeUDL in Nepali Classrooms
These are not success stories from ideal conditions. They are real stories from real teachers working in real Nepali schools.
I always thought inclusive education was only for students with disabilities. UDL showed me it is for every child in my classroom, including the ones I thought were just shy or slow.
I have 14 students who speak Rai at home. When I started using visual supports and group activities, three students who had been silent all year started participating.
After our teachers completed UDL training, we saw fewer students referred for failing. They were not failing. They just needed the lesson to be built differently.
Join an Upcoming Training
Our workshops are hands-on, practical, and grounded in the Nepali classroom experience. Seats fill quickly.
Introduction to UDL: One-Day Workshop
A foundational workshop covering the three principles of UDL with practical classroom application exercises. Participants leave with a ready-to-use lesson plan.
Register NowUDL for Multilingual Classrooms
Designed for classrooms where students come with different home languages. Covers representation strategies, vocabulary support, and culturally responsive UDL practice.
Register NowUDL School Leadership Workshop
A half-day session for school leaders on how to build a whole-school UDL culture, support teachers in implementation, and measure progress over time.
Register NowJoin This Work
There are many ways to be part of building a more inclusive education system in Nepal.
Attend a Training
Join one of our upcoming workshops and bring UDL back to your classroom or school.
See Training Schedule →Partner With Us
If you are a school, NGO, municipality, or institution, let us explore how we can work together.
Explore Partnerships →Support Our Work
Help us reach more teachers and more children across Nepal. Your support funds free resources, training, and research.
Support UDL Nepal →Volunteer or Contribute
Are you an educator, researcher, designer, or translator? We welcome skilled volunteers who want to contribute.
See Opportunities →Our Partners
We are proud to work alongside organizations that share our commitment to inclusive, equitable education in Nepal.
