Litcius/Paper detail

Teaching in an open village: a case study on culturally responsive computing in compulsory education

Michael Lachney, Audrey Bennett, Ron Eglash, Aman Yadav, Sukanya Kannan Moudgalya

2021Computer Science Education37 citationsDOI

Abstract

Background: As teachers work to broaden the participation of racially and ethnically underrepresented groups in computer science (CS), culturally responsive computing (CRC) becomes more pertinent to formal settings.Objective: Yet, equity-oriented literature offers limited guidance for developing deep forms of CRC in the classroom. In response, we support the claim that “it takes a village” to develop equity-oriented CS education but additively highlight the roles of cultural experts in the process.Methods: We use a case study methodology to explore one instance of this: a collaboration between a multi-racial team of researchers, a Black cosmetologist, and a White technology teacher.Findings: Three themes supported the CRC collaboration: multi-directional relationship building, iterative engagement with culture-computing, and collaborative implementation of a hybrid lesson.Implications: As opposed to orienting broadening participation around extractive metaphors like “pipelines,” our case study constructs the metaphor of an “open village” to orient CS education toward collaborations between schools and the communities they serve.

Topics & Concepts

Equity (law)MetaphorComputer scienceMulticultural educationEthnically diverseMathematics educationCultural diversityKnowledge managementSociologyPedagogyEthnic groupPsychologyMulticulturalismPolitical scienceLinguisticsPhilosophyAnthropologyLawTeaching and Learning ProgrammingGender and Technology in EducationChild Development and Digital Technology