Digital accessibility education in context: expert perspectives on building capacity in academia and the workplace
Digital accessibility education in context: expert perspectives on building capacity in academia and the workplace
The social model of disability, accessibility legislation, and the digital transformation spurred by COVID-19 expose a lack of accessibility capacity in the workforce, indicating persistent gaps in academic and professional education. We adopt a socio-cultural lens to examine how the context of education and training influences teaching and learning in university and workplace sectors, and how expert educators manage and negotiate these contextual factors to build accessibility capacity. This paper reports qualitative research with 55 experienced educators using expert panel method and focus groups. Analysis highlights the important disconnects and contextual challenges that educators must navigate and negotiate to affect and embed cultural change. We find that faculty and workplace cultures frequently perpetuate precarity in accessibility education, individualising the responsibility to ‘heroes’ or ‘champions’, while disciplinary and role-based silos limit the scope for raising awareness and developing widescale competency. Conversely, centres of excellence and communities of practice can cultivate and sustain links between education and research, engage expert users, and promote interdisciplinary and cross-role learning environments, where accessibility is increasingly recognised as a shared endeavour. We conclude that greater collaboration between academia and industry can enhance pedagogical understanding, to transform accessibility educational practices and build and sustain capacity for the future.
Coverdale, Andy
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Lewthwaite, Sarah
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Horton, Sarah
9dfbfe74-8c91-44fb-867f-f2325a9d0174
12 March 2024
Coverdale, Andy
27ac1a1c-5502-4ee3-b0e2-fc9226ff7b22
Lewthwaite, Sarah
0e26d7cf-8932-4d65-8fea-3dceacf0ea88
Horton, Sarah
9dfbfe74-8c91-44fb-867f-f2325a9d0174
Coverdale, Andy, Lewthwaite, Sarah and Horton, Sarah
(2024)
Digital accessibility education in context: expert perspectives on building capacity in academia and the workplace.
ACM Transactions on Accessible Computing.
(doi:10.1145/3649508).
Abstract
The social model of disability, accessibility legislation, and the digital transformation spurred by COVID-19 expose a lack of accessibility capacity in the workforce, indicating persistent gaps in academic and professional education. We adopt a socio-cultural lens to examine how the context of education and training influences teaching and learning in university and workplace sectors, and how expert educators manage and negotiate these contextual factors to build accessibility capacity. This paper reports qualitative research with 55 experienced educators using expert panel method and focus groups. Analysis highlights the important disconnects and contextual challenges that educators must navigate and negotiate to affect and embed cultural change. We find that faculty and workplace cultures frequently perpetuate precarity in accessibility education, individualising the responsibility to ‘heroes’ or ‘champions’, while disciplinary and role-based silos limit the scope for raising awareness and developing widescale competency. Conversely, centres of excellence and communities of practice can cultivate and sustain links between education and research, engage expert users, and promote interdisciplinary and cross-role learning environments, where accessibility is increasingly recognised as a shared endeavour. We conclude that greater collaboration between academia and industry can enhance pedagogical understanding, to transform accessibility educational practices and build and sustain capacity for the future.
Text
Coverdale et al_2024_Digital accessibility education in context
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 12 January 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 12 March 2024
Published date: 12 March 2024
Additional Information:
Funding information:
This study is funded by UK Research and Innovation Future Leaders Fellowship MR/S01571X/1. We would like to thank all our panel and focus group participants for their generous contributions to this research.
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Local EPrints ID: 487495
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/487495
PURE UUID: 3b00fe8b-60e9-4eaa-81c2-d66222ac8426
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Date deposited: 21 Feb 2024 17:43
Last modified: 02 May 2024 04:01
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