Top Banner
ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK Studying Our Inclusive Practices: Course Experiences of Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel Computer Science and Engineering University of Washington, Seattle
35

ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK Studying Our Inclusive Practices: Course Experiences of Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel Computer Science.

Dec 21, 2015

Download

Documents

Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK Studying Our Inclusive Practices: Course Experiences of Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel Computer Science.

ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK

Studying Our Inclusive Practices:Course Experiences of Students with Disabilities

Katherine DeibelComputer Science and

EngineeringUniversity of Washington, Seattle

Page 2: ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK Studying Our Inclusive Practices: Course Experiences of Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel Computer Science.

ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK 2

This is a Methodology Paper

▬More about:▬Research Challenges▬Data collection methods▬Analysis methods

▬Less about:▬Presenting findings▬Interpreting findings

How to best study the course experiences of CS students with

disabilities

Page 3: ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK Studying Our Inclusive Practices: Course Experiences of Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel Computer Science.

ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK 3

Outline

▬Motivation: Inclusive Education

▬Methodology

▬Research challenges

▬Interview study design

▬Implementation and Early Findings

▬Implementation Details

▬Early findings

▬Conclusion and Future Work

Page 4: ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK Studying Our Inclusive Practices: Course Experiences of Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel Computer Science.

ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK 4

Inclusive Education

▬Incorporate accommodations into one’s educational practices [Loreman, 2005]▬Minimizes accommodation requests

▬Proactive instead of reactive

▬Focus on all forms of disabilities

Support all students of all abilities in all learning situations

Page 5: ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK Studying Our Inclusive Practices: Course Experiences of Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel Computer Science.

ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK 5

What about Computing Education?

How successful are we at including students with

disabilities?

How do we answer that question?

Page 6: ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK Studying Our Inclusive Practices: Course Experiences of Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel Computer Science.

ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK 6

Approach

Go straight to the source: Students with disabilities in CS

courses

Page 7: ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK Studying Our Inclusive Practices: Course Experiences of Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel Computer Science.

ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK 7

Definition Challenges

▬Disability is medically and legally defined

▬Not all “disabled” people identify as having a disability▬ To avoid stigmatization (e.g., depression,

learning disabilities, etc.)

▬ Cultural beliefs (e.g., Deaf culture)

▬Implications:▬ Study should explore all disabilities

▬ Calls for participants need to be carefully worded

Page 8: ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK Studying Our Inclusive Practices: Course Experiences of Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel Computer Science.

ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK 8

Call for Participation

Do you have a physical, mobility, psychiatric, or learning disability?

Are you Deaf or hard of hearing?

Do you have ADD/HD, depression, or anxiety issues?

Page 9: ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK Studying Our Inclusive Practices: Course Experiences of Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel Computer Science.

ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK 9

Visibility Challenges

▬Not all disabilities are readily visible

▬Disability services keep lists of students registered as having a disability:▬ Students must request accommodations

▬ Students with invisible disabilities tend to delay requesting accommodations [Cory, 2005]

▬Implications:▬ Cannot rely solely on students registered

with disability services

Page 10: ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK Studying Our Inclusive Practices: Course Experiences of Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel Computer Science.

ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK 10

Recruitment of Participants

▬Do not rely on list of students from disability services

▬Recruit from the entire course▬Course mailing lists

▬Course webs

▬Course bulletin boards

Page 11: ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK Studying Our Inclusive Practices: Course Experiences of Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel Computer Science.

ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK 11

Population Challenges

▬Only 9.8% of U.S. college freshmen have a disability [Scott et al., 2004]

▬CS undergraduates: 7.2% [NSF, 2004]

▬Represents a wide diversity of disabilities

▬Implications:

▬Expect a small number of participants

▬Participants will have different disabilities

Page 12: ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK Studying Our Inclusive Practices: Course Experiences of Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel Computer Science.

ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK 12

Achieving a Large Sample

▬Recruit from multiple courses

▬Recruit from multiple terms

▬Recruit across multiple institutions

Page 13: ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK Studying Our Inclusive Practices: Course Experiences of Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel Computer Science.

ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK 13

Summary of Challenges

▬Difficulty in recruiting participants

▬Small number of participants

▬Unlikely to have multiple participants with the same disabilities

▬Multiple iterations of the study necessary to collect a large sample

▬Data validity is a concern

Page 14: ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK Studying Our Inclusive Practices: Course Experiences of Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel Computer Science.

ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK 14

A Qualitative Approach

Illustrative Case Study

Semi-Structured Interviews

Grounded Theory Analysis

Page 15: ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK Studying Our Inclusive Practices: Course Experiences of Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel Computer Science.

ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK 15

Illustrative Case Study

▬In-depth investigation of a phenomenon

▬Looks at only a few instances

▬Develop theories to illustrate what is occurring in those instances

▬Theories generated can be explored in further studies

Page 16: ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK Studying Our Inclusive Practices: Course Experiences of Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel Computer Science.

ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK 16

Semi-Structured Interviews

▬One-on-one interviews

▬Prepared questions are only a guide

▬Subject drives the conversation

▬Multiple interviews can be conducted

▬Captures changes over time

▬Allows exploration of a wide variety of topics

Page 17: ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK Studying Our Inclusive Practices: Course Experiences of Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel Computer Science.

ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK 17

Sample Interview Questions

▬How does your instructor run the course? What do you like? Not like?

▬How does your disability affect your education? How will it affect you in this course?

▬Assuming that your instructor(s) knew about your disability, how would you want them to respond to you as a student?

Page 18: ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK Studying Our Inclusive Practices: Course Experiences of Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel Computer Science.

ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK 18

Grounded Theory

▬Analysis approach for qualitative data [Taylor & Bogdan, 1998]

▬Inductively develop themes from data

▬Occurs throughout the data collection process

▬Themes evolve as more data is analyzed

▬Interview questions are adapted to further explore and challenge themes

Page 19: ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK Studying Our Inclusive Practices: Course Experiences of Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel Computer Science.

ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK 19

Previous Disability Studies

▬Students with dyslexia [Edwards, 1994]

▬Invisible disabilities & accommodations [Cory, 2005]

▬Disability and Queer Women [Whitney, 2006]

Page 20: ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK Studying Our Inclusive Practices: Course Experiences of Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel Computer Science.

ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK 20

Implementation Details

▬Student interviewed twice

▬Two iterations have been completed

▬First Iteration (in paper):

▬Two participants

▬Second Iteration (recently conducted):

▬Two participants

Page 21: ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK Studying Our Inclusive Practices: Course Experiences of Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel Computer Science.

ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK 21

Observations

▬Many participants not registered with disability services

▬Richness of conversations

▬Many themes arise out of the data

Page 22: ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK Studying Our Inclusive Practices: Course Experiences of Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel Computer Science.

ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK 22

Identified Themes

▬Self-Advocacy

▬Family Support

▬Not Registering With Disability Services

▬Multimodal Presentation

▬Benefits of Online Course Artifacts

▬Access Breakdowns

▬Podcasting

Page 23: ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK Studying Our Inclusive Practices: Course Experiences of Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel Computer Science.

ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK 23

Theme: Course Artifacts Online▬Availability of course slides,

textbooks, and code produced in class noted as helpful:▬Seth: bypasses hearing

problem

▬Alan: reduces need for note taking

▬Pam: less anxiety if gets lost

▬Dave: less anxiety if misses lecture or gets behind in course

Page 24: ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK Studying Our Inclusive Practices: Course Experiences of Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel Computer Science.

ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK 24

Sub-Theme: Podcasting

▬Several courses at UW are now audio recorded and available as podcasts

▬Desirability of podcasts noted:▬Seth: beneficial in other courses

▬Alan: alternative to notetaking and limited access tutorials

▬Dave: Never used podcasts in other courses

Would have used for CS1

Page 25: ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK Studying Our Inclusive Practices: Course Experiences of Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel Computer Science.

ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK 25

Conclusions and Future Work▬Research challenges for this are

exist

▬Methodology addresses the challenges

▬Rich data set to be analyzed further

▬For the future…

▬More interviews?

▬Helping researchers at other universities?

Page 26: ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK Studying Our Inclusive Practices: Course Experiences of Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel Computer Science.

ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK 26

Acknowledgements

▬The participants

▬Sheryl Burgstahler and Rebecca Cory, DO-IT, University of Washington

▬British Computer Society

▬Graduate & Professional Student Senate, University of Washington

Page 27: ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK Studying Our Inclusive Practices: Course Experiences of Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel Computer Science.

ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK 27

Thank you

Questions?

Page 28: ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK Studying Our Inclusive Practices: Course Experiences of Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel Computer Science.

ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK 28

Extra Slides

Page 29: ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK Studying Our Inclusive Practices: Course Experiences of Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel Computer Science.

ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK 29

Implementing Inclusion

▬Implemented and studied with success at many schools [Clough & Corbett, 2000].

▬Numerous inclusion guides exist:

▬K-12: Loreman et al., 2005.

▬College: Burgstahler, 2005; Strange, 2000.

▬Involves good pedagogical practices:

▬Reflective learning, collaborative learning, attention to different learning styles, etc.

Page 30: ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK Studying Our Inclusive Practices: Course Experiences of Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel Computer Science.

ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK 30

Participants

AlanAnimation course

Art

Developmental Disability

Registered with DRS

Dave* CS1

Psychology

OCD, depression, anxiety

Not registered with DRS

SethCS1

Intended CS major

Deaf in one ear

Not registered with DRS

Pam CS2

Intended CS or EE major

Generalized anxiety disorder

Not registered with DRS

Page 31: ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK Studying Our Inclusive Practices: Course Experiences of Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel Computer Science.

ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK 31

Theme: Self-Advocacy

▬All participants viewed themselves as responsible for managing their disabilities▬Alan: contacting faculty before

start of term

▬Seth: sitting in best places for hearing, selecting study locations

▬Pam:monitoring anxiety, attending to deadlines

Page 32: ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK Studying Our Inclusive Practices: Course Experiences of Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel Computer Science.

ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK 32

Theme: Family Support

▬Families involved Alan and Seth in K-12 accommodation discussions

▬Alan: Parents intervened after accommodations fell through

▬Exceptions do exist:

▬Dave: Family denies existence of psychological conditions

Page 33: ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK Studying Our Inclusive Practices: Course Experiences of Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel Computer Science.

ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK 33

Theme: Disability Services

▬All participants had invisible disabilities▬Three not registered with disability

services:▬Seth is able to self-accommodate ▬Pam and Dave do not view selves as

disabled▬Similar to findings by Cory, 2005

▬Alan does register with disability services:▬Accommodations: books on tape,

electronic text▬Has realized he needs the support

Page 34: ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK Studying Our Inclusive Practices: Course Experiences of Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel Computer Science.

ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK 34

Theme: Multimodal Presentation▬Beneficial if instructor presents

material both orally and visually

▬Seth: bypasses hearing problem

▬Alan: potentially overwhelming if too much text is presented

Page 35: ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK Studying Our Inclusive Practices: Course Experiences of Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel Computer Science.

ITiCSE 2007, Dundee, Scotland, UK 35

Sub-Theme: Access Breakdowns▬Access breakdowns are problematic:

▬Pam: TA never passed on password to textbook;

Lost access to exercises▬Alan: Course textbook decided

at last minute

Most lectures were software tutorials

DVD tutorials available only at limited times in a specific lab