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pH empowered: community participation in culturally responsive computing education

Michael Lachney, Ron Eglash, Audrey Bennett, William Babbitt, Lakisha Foy, Matt Drazin, Kathryn M. Rich

2021Learning Media and Technology34 citationsDOI

Abstract

Culturally responsive computing (CRC) frames the localized knowledges and practices of Black, Brown, and Indigenous communities as assets for working toward racial justice in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM). A key part of CRC is the role that local communities play in designing and/or implementing curricula and technologies. Yet, there is a dearth of research on collaborating with local knowledge experts and what they think about CRC. In response, this paper details a two-year long research project on the design and implementation of one CRC program called pH Empowered. pH Empowered uses computing to bridge Black hairstyling, chemistry, and entrepreneurship. Through a mixed-methods study of one pH Empowered professional development workshop, we show how cosmetologists, urban farmers, and librarians had diverse perspectives about how to be culturally responsive with STEM and the racial justice goal of broadening participation in STEM education.

Topics & Concepts

CurriculumIndigenousBridge (graph theory)Economic JusticePublic relationsUnderrepresented MinoritySociologyEngineering ethicsPolitical sciencePedagogyMedical educationEngineeringMedicineEcologyBiologyInternal medicineLawTeaching and Learning ProgrammingICT in Developing CommunitiesEnergy Harvesting in Wireless Networks
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