Publication | Open Access
‘Dreaming in colour’: disabled higher education students’ perspectives on improving design practices that would enable them to benefit from their use of technologies
69
Citations
45
References
2020
Year
Design PracticesDisabilityEducationTechnology ProductsInclusive DesignTechnology IntegrationStem EducationInclusive EducationDisability StudyArt EducationAssistive TechnologyDesignAccessible EducationHigher EducationEducational InnovationDisabled StudentsDesign ThinkingColour ’Special EducationEducational DesignTechnology
Abstract The focus of this paper is the design of technology products and services for disabled students in higher education. It analyses the perspectives of disabled students studying in the US, the UK, Germany, Israel and Canada, regarding their experiences of using technologies to support their learning. The students shared how the functionality of the technologies supported them to study and enabled them to achieve their academic potential. Despite these positive outcomes, the students also reported difficulties associated with: i) the design of the technologies, ii) a lack of technology know-how and iii) a lack of social capital. When identifying potential solutions to these difficulties the disabled students imagined both preferable and possible futures where faculty, higher education institutions, researchers and technology companies are challenged to push the boundaries of their current design practices.
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