TITLE: 
                        
                            Leveraging Universal Design for Learning and Technology to Advance Equity in Inclusive Education
                                
                                
                                    AUTHORS: 
                                            Gilbert Kalonde, Samuel Boateng, Claudia Duedu 
                                                    
                                                        KEYWORDS: 
                        Universal Design for Learning (UDL), Technology Integration, Inclusive Education, Accessibility, Equity in Education, Teacher Preparation, High- and Low-Resource Settings, Instructional Design, Digital Tools, Educational Policy 
                                                    
                                                    
                                                        JOURNAL NAME: 
                        Open Access Library Journal,  
                        Vol.12 No.9, 
                        September
                                                        30,
                        2025
                                                    
                                                    
                                                        ABSTRACT: Universal Design for Learning (UDL) has emerged as a widely endorsed framework for creating equitable, accessible, and flexible learning environments. When paired with technology integration, UDL offers significant potential for addressing learner variability and removing instructional barriers. This paper presents a review and critical synthesis of peer-reviewed studies published over the past two decades that examine the application of technology-supported UDL in inclusive education contexts. The review interrogates both convergent and divergent findings, highlights methodological strengths and weaknesses, and compares evidence from high- and low-resource educational settings. Findings indicate that while technology-enabled UDL strategies consistently improve engagement, accessibility, and differentiated instruction, implementation is uneven, with persistent challenges related to teacher preparedness, infrastructural limitations, and contextual adaptation. Identified gaps include the limited representation of low-resource contexts in empirical studies, inconsistent measures of learner outcomes, and insufficient longitudinal evidence. The paper concludes with three actionable recommendations for educators and policymakers: embed UDL and technology training into pre-service and in-service professional development; develop low-cost, scalable digital tools tailored to local contexts; and establish long-term evaluation frameworks to assess impact. By critically mapping the existing evidence, this synthesis underscores the urgency of leveraging UDL and technology to meet equity and accessibility mandates in today’s increasingly diverse classrooms.