“Regular” CS × Inclusive Design = Smarter Students and Greater Diversity

Author:

Garcia Rosalinda1ORCID,Morreale Patricia2ORCID,Letaw Lara1ORCID,Chatterjee Amreeta1ORCID,Patel Pankati2ORCID,Yang Sarah1ORCID,Escobar Isaac Tijerina1ORCID,Noa Geraldine Jimena1ORCID,Burnett Margaret1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Oregon State University, USA

2. Kean University, USA

Abstract

What if “regular” Computer Science (CS) faculty each taught elements of inclusive design in “regular” CS courses across an undergraduate curriculum? Would it affect the CS program's climate and inclusiveness to diverse students? Would it improve retention? Would students learn less CS? Would they actually learn any inclusive design? To answer these questions, we conducted a year-long Action Research investigation, in which 13 CS faculty integrated elements of inclusive design into 44 CS/IT offerings across a 4-year curriculum. The 613 affected students’ educational work products, grades, and/or climate questionnaire responses revealed significant improvements in students’ course outcomes (higher course grades and fewer course fails/incompletes/withdrawals), especially for marginalized groups; revealed that most students did learn and apply inclusive design concepts to their CS activities; and revealed that inclusion and teamwork in the courses significantly improved. These results suggest a new pathway for significantly improving students’ retention, their knowledge and usage of inclusive design, and their experiences across CS education—for marginalized groups and for all students.

Funder

OSU Center for Research in Engineering Education Online

Center for Inclusive Computing at Northeastern University

NSF

USDA-NIFA

Publisher

Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)

Subject

Education,General Computer Science

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