Blogs (4) >>
Sat 23 Mar 2024 11:35 - 12:00 at Meeting Room D136 - Culturally Relevant K-12 Computing Chair(s): Satabdi Basu

Culturally responsive computing scholars often use the metaphor and heuristic of intersectionality to address issues of race and gender in research with Black, Brown, and Indigenous children in K12 computer science (CS) education. This has led to critical analyses that reveal the inequitable conditions that children of color face in CS education. Intersectionality has also supported curricular innovations and interventions that aim to make CS education more equitable by being responsive to children’s identities and communities. However, the concept of class has received less attention than race and gender by culturally responsive computing scholars who draw on intersectionality in their CS education research. How might class fit into intersectional research and theory in culturally responsive computing scholarship? The objective of this paper is to answer this question with a proof-of-concept study that tests the feasibility of what we call worker-driven computing education. We introduce findings from our research and collaborations with current, once, or retired autoworkers in Detroit, Michigan to define the computational thinking concept of automation from the perspective of autoworkers. This was done with children from Detroit Public Schools in mind. Through analyzing qualitative data (i.e., workshop deliverables and interviews) a worker-driven concept of automation was defined by leveraging autoworker-expertise about the points of production in the auto-industry. Our findings reveal how this definition would focus on introducing the concept in the context of lifelong learning about how to communicate and work across divisions of labor to make workplaces safe, healthy, and efficient.

Sat 23 Mar

Displayed time zone: Pacific Time (US & Canada) change

10:45 - 12:00
Culturally Relevant K-12 ComputingPapers at Meeting Room D136
Chair(s): Satabdi Basu SRI International
10:45
25m
Talk
Developing Culturally Sustaining Elementary Computer Science Education with Indigenous CommunitiesK12MSI
Papers
Kathryn M. Rich American Institutes for Research, Marissa Spang American Institutes for Research, Jill Bowdon American Institutes for Research, Joseph Wilson American Institutes for Research, Heather Cunningham Boot Up Professional Development, Mckay Perkins Boot Up Professional Development
DOI
11:10
25m
Talk
Scaffolding Minority High School Students’ Computer Science Learning: Culturally Relevant Summer CampK12MSI
Papers
Jung Won Hur Auburn University, Jay Bhuyan Tuskegee University, Fan Wu Tuskegee University
DOI
11:35
25m
Talk
Worker-Driven Computing Education: A Proof-of-Concept Study for K12 Culturally Responsive ComputingK12
Papers
Michael Lachney Michigan State University, Brian Ferguson Bey Henry Ford High School, Detroit Public Schools, Samuela Mouzaoir Michigan State University, Christa Robinson Michigan State University
DOI