The Burden of Survival: How Doctoral Students in Computing Bridge the Chasm of Inaccessibility

要旨

Despite efforts to support students with disabilities in higher education, few continue to pursue doctoral degrees in computing. We conducted an interview study with 12 blind and low vision, and 7 deaf and hard of hearing current and former doctoral students in computing to understand how graduate students adjust to inaccessibility and ineffective accommodations. We asked participants how they worked around inaccessibility, managed ineffective accommodations, and advocated for tools and services. Employing a lens of ableism in our analysis, we found that participants' extra effort to address accessibility gaps gave rise to a burden of survival, which they sustained to meet expectations of graduate-level productivity. We recommend equitable solutions that acknowledge taken-for-granted workarounds and that actively address inaccessibility in the graduate school context.

受賞
Honorable Mention
著者
Kristen Shinohara
Rochester Institute of Technology, Rochester, New York, United States
Michael McQuaid
Rochester Institute of Technology, Rochester, New York, United States
Nayeri Jacobo
Rochester Institute of Technology, Rochester, New York, United States
DOI

10.1145/3411764.3445277

論文URL

https://doi.org/10.1145/3411764.3445277

動画

会議: CHI 2021

The ACM CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (https://chi2021.acm.org/)

セッション: Understanding Accessibility

[A] Paper Room 01, 2021-05-11 17:00:00~2021-05-11 19:00:00 / [B] Paper Room 01, 2021-05-12 01:00:00~2021-05-12 03:00:00 / [C] Paper Room 01, 2021-05-12 09:00:00~2021-05-12 11:00:00
Paper Room 01
12 件の発表
2021-05-11 17:00:00
2021-05-11 19:00:00
日本語まとめ
読み込み中…