AVELA -- A Vision for Engineering Literacy & Access: Understanding Why Technology Alone Is Not Enough (2401.14581v2)
Abstract: Unequal technology access for Black and Latine communities has been a persistent economic, social justice, and human rights issue despite increased technology accessibility due to advancements in consumer electronics like phones, tablets, and computers. We contextualize socio-technical access inequalities for Black and Latine urban communities and find that many students are hesitant to engage with available technologies due to a lack of engaging support systems. We present a holistic student-led STEM engagement model through AVELA - A Vision for Engineering Literacy and Access leveraging culturally responsive lessons, mentor embodied community representation, and service learning. To evaluate the model's impact after 4 years of mentoring 200+ university student instructors in teaching to 2,500+ secondary school students in 100+ classrooms, we conducted 24 semi-structured interviews with college AnonymizedOrganization members. We identify access barriers and provide principled recommendations for designing future STEM education programs.
- Kyle Johnson (8 papers)
- Vicente Arroyos (3 papers)
- Celeste Garcia (1 paper)
- Liban Hussein (1 paper)
- Aisha Cora (1 paper)
- Tsewone Melaku (1 paper)
- Jay L. Cunningham (2 papers)
- R. Benjamin Shapiro (5 papers)
- Vikram Iyer (18 papers)