Title: Participatory Research Approaches with Disabled Students
1Participatory Research Approaches with Disabled
Students
- Dr Jane Seale, School of Education, University of
Southampton
2Overview
- Provide an overview of a current research
project- LEXDIS-which is using participatory
approaches to involve disabled students in
e-learning research - Use examples from the project and experiences
from related fields of study (e.g. participatory
design) to illuminate the challenges that arise
from undertaking participatory research. - Reflect on how this and other PR studies
contribute to conceptions of participation in
higher education.
3Personal understanding of participation
- Participatory Design
- Emanates from design technology field, has been
specifically used in Assistive Technology HCI
research and applied in education and healthcare
settings - Participatory research
- Learning Disabilities field (not-specific to
education) - Has a wider use in research (i.e. not specific to
disability- has been used with children and older
adults)
4Participatory Design definitions
- Working directly with users ( other
stakeholders) in the design of systems - Users are actively involved in setting design
goals and planning prototypes - Contrasts with methods where user input is sought
only after initial concepts and prototypes have
been produced (i.e. PD is more than user-testing) - Early and continual participation of intended
users to produce better technologies that better
suit the needs of users
5Participatory Design Methods
- Brainstorming
- Focus groups/Interviews
- Ethnographic observation of users and their
practice - Scenarios as a means of conveying and developing
visions of new technology - Low tech prototypes
6Participatory Design Issues
- Is the right user identified?
- In education s/w design studies that use PD,
frequently the teacher is the only defined user,
and not the learner. - Changing role of user (as process progresses)
- Informant through to designer
- Nature of expertise of users
- Domain expert or design expert or both?
- Conceptions of the role of user
- Informant, designer, coach, participant, partner,
knowledge-worker expert - True partnership?
- Rare for PD articles to have users have co-authors
7Participatory Design Related Concepts
- Co-operation
- Partnership
- Mutual learning
- learning about one another- reflexivity
- Activity (as opposed to passivity)
- Respect (for all collaborators, particularly
those with special needs)
8Participatory Research in Learning Disabilities
Field definitions
- Aims to engage participants in the design,
conduct and evaluation of research with the
construction of non-hierarchical research
relations - Participants encouraged to own the outcome by
setting the goals and sharing in decisions about
processes - Nothing about me, without me
9PR in LD What is involved
- Ensuring research topic is one that people with
LD consider worthy of investigation - Asking people with LD to act as consultants or
advisors to projects - Provision of support, training and payment so
that people with LD can undertake their own
research
10PR in LD Methods
- Narrative research Life history, biography, oral
history - Focus groups, interviews
- Action Research
- Involving interventions for change
11Issues
- Finding ways to communicate
- Participant can be reliant on the non-disabled
person (researcher or support worker) for access
to the spoken and written word - Can be a tendency for support workers to speak on
behalf of the person with LD - Gaining informed consent
- In order to gain informed consent, people with LD
need to understand what research is - Accessible information
- Negotiating access
- Professional gatekeepers can be difficult
- Perceptions that people with LD can have of
researchers as just another professional,
conducting professional surveillance
12Issues
- Role of non-disabled researcher
- Ensuring integrity of accounts gained through
narrative life history methods - Finding ways to support people with LD to become
researchers in their own capacity - Non-disabled researchers need training if they
are to work in PR and take on a support role - Skills of the researcher in PR can be played down
(Walmsley 2004) - Accountability and ownership
- Non disabled researcher remains accountable to
the funder- who owns the research agenda?
13Issues
- Participation versus Emancipation
- Emancipatory research
- Non-disabled researcher is accountable to the
people with LD. Their skills are at the disposal
of the people with LD - Under the control of disabled people and pursued
in their interests (Mike Oliver) - Brings about a change, emancipation
- Participatory research
- A useful compromise, a step towards ER (Chappell,
2000)
14PR in LD concepts
- Alliances and partnerships
- Advocacy
- Inclusion
- Ownership
15PR in HE The LEXDIS Project
- JISC funded Learner Experience Phase II
- Mike Wald, Jane Seale, E.A Draffan
- Produce 30 case studies describing disabled
learners different e-learning experiences - Using interview plus method
- Where plus is an artefact produced by
participant to illuminate or add to the issues
raised in interview
16LEXDIS Objectives
- Explore and describe how disabled learners
experience and participate in technology-rich
environments - Investigate the strategies, beliefs and
intentions of disabled learners who are effective
in learning in technology-rich environments and
identity factors that enable or inhibit effective
e-learning
17LEXDIS PR Methods
- Phase 1
- Advise on importance of research questions,
rephrase, add, take away - Advise on media/methods for plus element
- Phase 2 Contribute own experiences in a form and
media of their choice - Phase 3 Advise on analysis of data and key
implications to be drawn out of the data
18(No Transcript)
19Are we asking the right ?s
- These are the questions we would like to have
answered in Phase 2 of our project. Please could
you tick the ones you feel are important? Then
add any comments, additional questions or changes
you would like to see in the text box below the
questions.
20What form should the plus take?
- These are some of the ways we hope that students
will share their thoughts and experiences about
the technologies they use. Please could you tick
the ones you feel are important? Then add any
comments and other ways students can share their
thoughts in the text box below the suggestions - Links to an on-line blog (one you set up or one
provided for you) - Links to your existing resources (e.g. a wiki,
PowerPoint presentation, web page etc) - Contributing resources to the LexDis website.
- Audio or video recordings e.g. podcasts etc.
- Reflections on particular moments or events that
have changed the way you have used technology in
your learning.
21Responses Are we asking the right questions?
- Ranking of questions (n47)
- How do you use technology (including assistive
technologies) to help you study? - In what way do your assistive technologies affect
how and what you learn? - 2. How do you feel about using technology to
help you learn? - 4. How are you supported with regard to your
on-line learning and use of assistive
technologies (e.g. friends, family, university) - How do you feel about the support you have
received? - How do you use technologies for social networking
and are they sometimes linked to your learning? - Are there particular moments or events that have
changed the way you have used technology in your
learning? - Are successful assistive or enabling technology
users also successful on-line learners?
22Prompted Responses
- Q4 is quite tricky to answer because Ive never
really spoken to other AT users, so can only
answer from a personal view. I felt generally the
questions seem tricky to answer because they have
quite a wide scope. E.g Q2 I cant think of where
to start with this
- Question 4 was quite difficult for me to
understand what you meant. Not being a
techno-buff at all it would be easier for me if
the terminology was explained. - Some of these questions would be answered in a
negative manner, but I feel all are important
23Prompted Responses
- There is a good variety of questions here. The
ones that I have ticked feel appropriate to the
way that I have used technology throughout my
course. You could ask a question such as how do
you feel technology resources could be improved
to benefit you or something along those lines as
it will enable different points of view to be
expressed to develop for the future
- Do you think technology helps you to better
understand things and study (suggestion for
alternative question) - I think all of those questions are important-can
definitely think of some critical incidents
within learning (qu 8), but learning from them is
quite complex, as youre not just dependent on
yourself, youre dependent on others changing
their ideas
24Unanticipated responses
- Many respondents answered the questions instead
of ranking the questions - Lots of interesting responses, in order not to
devalue the contribution, we analysed these to
see if they gave any hint of alternative
questions we could ask or how we might ask
questions in the interview.
25Influence on interview ?s
- How are you supported with regard to your on-line
learning? Is this different when compared to
the support you have for the use of assistive
technologies? (e.g. friends, family, university)
What techniques provide most help? (on-line
guides etc) and what kind of support would you
like that is not currently available?
- What are your feelings about using technology to
help you learn? (Would you cope without using
technologies?) Generally, do you have any
difficulties or worries when using technologies
as part of your learning?
26Influence on research questions
- Last ranked question Are successful assistive
or enabling technology users also successful
on-line learners? - Something we are still interested in (as is the
funder), but it is hard for students to answer
themselves, their perceptions of success are
complex and so any relationship may need to be
inferred.
27Responses What form should the plus take?
- 1. Links to your existing resources (e.g. a wiki,
Powerpoint presentation, web page) - 2. Audio or video-recordings e.g. podcasts
- 3. Links to an online blog
- 3. Contributing resources to the LexDis website
- 5. Reflections on particular moments or events
that have changed the way you have used
technology in your learning
28Plus Responses
- Im glad someone is investigating this area of
technology its something I feel passionate about
as I am heavily involved with computers and
technology - All are fine, I just feel personally that
podcasts dont really hold my attention for long!
- I might change question e to experiences or
learning environments that have changed the way
you use technology. If you have been at a school
where IT is integrated into learning you are more
likely to be used to or comfortable with using in
day to day learning. - Unsure about these
29Plus responses
- If Im busy writing a blog Im not studying and
for part-time students its hard enough to fit
study in anyway with the rest of lifes
commitments
- Re blogs I find reflection very useful- whilst
Ive reflected on my learning experiences a lot,
the only public reflective piece Ive done is
full of the positives, as it had to be positive.
30Alternative pluss
- Strategies
- http//www.lexdis.ecs.soton.ac.uk/hints/
31Font Size
32Issues
- Understanding and meanings
- Motivations for participation
- Rewards for participation
- Recruitment
- Gate-keepers
- The nature of participation
33Understandings and meanings
- E-learning and assistive technologies as terms
are either meaningless to disabled students or
understood differently
34Motivations for participation
- Over-whelming desire to do something that could
benefit others - Adds to the feeling of responsibility that the
researchers have, to deliver on this expectation - 17 interviews conducted so far for phase 2, which
is VERY encouraging for this kind of research
35Incentives for participation
- Offered
- Information fact sheet (phase 1)
- Gift tokens (Phase 2)
- Requested
- Reference confirming participation, that can use
in Personal Development file and job applications
36Recruitment
- Phase 1 All-comers welcome, didnt want to turn
anyone away - With a marginalised group, it is important not to
marginalise or exclude them further - Potential high numbers had implications for
analysis and payment - Contact details and photos of researchers
- Humanise research
37Gate-keepers
- Student support services
- Put in the effort to get them on board and gain
their trust and support - Agreed to email students on our behalf- gave
research credibility - Advice on language, mental health issues
- Design by committee- adds time and involves
compromise
38The nature of participation
- Dont want to be videod
- Funders assumption that digital natives are
comfortable with video - Private participation?
- Might need to work harder at informed
participation - Conceptions of research might explain why many
participants answered the phase 1 questions
rather than critiqued them
39To what extent is LEXDIS participatory?
- Ensuring research topic is one that disabled
students consider worthy of investigation - Not acting as researchers
- Acting as consultants or advisors to project
- Joint decision-makers
- Not initiated the research agenda
- The funders have an agenda, which is about
informing staff and changing teaching practices - Social technologies, expert e-learners, critical
moments - Our student advisors have an agenda which is
about informing students - Describing how they use technologies, strategies
support
40Positioning participatory research in relation to
participation in Higher Education research
41Participation in HE concepts
Identity well-being
Decision-Making
Access
Impact
Partnership
Orientations
Advocacy
Value (perceptions of)
42Discussion Questions
- Can we learn about participation through
participation? - Can we assume shared agendas, shared worlds?
- Who or what is driving the participation agenda
in HE?