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TapeBlocks: A Making Toolkit for People Living with Intellectual Disabilities

Kirsten Ellis, Emily Dao, Osian Smith, Stephen Lindsay, Patrick Olivier

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Abstract

The accessibility and affordability of tangible electronic toolkits are significant barriers to their uptake by people with disabilities. We present the design and evaluation of TapeBlocks, a low-cost, low-fidelity toolkit intended to be accessible for people with intellectual disabilities while promoting creativity and engagement. We evaluated TapeBlocks by interviewing makers, special educational needs teachers and support coaches. Analysis of these interviews informed the design of a series of maker workshops using TapeBlocks with young adults living with intellectual disabilities, led by support coaches with support from the research team. Participants were able to engage with TapeBlocks and making, eventually building their own TapeBlocks to make personal creations. Our evaluation reveals how TapeBlocks supports accessible making and playful discovery of electronics for people living with disabilities, and addresses a gap in existing toolkits by being tinkerable, affordable and having a low threshold for engagement.

Topics & Concepts

CreativityAssisted livingIntellectual disabilityInterviewFidelityPsychologyUniversal designCo-designComputer scienceMedical educationApplied psychologyInternet privacySociologyWorld Wide WebSocial psychologyGerontologyMedicineComputer architecturePsychiatryTelecommunicationsAnthropologyAssistive Technology in Communication and MobilityTechnology Use by Older AdultsDigital Accessibility for Disabilities