Artigo Revisado por pares

Disabilities and e-Learning Problems and Solutions: An Exploratory Study

2009; IEEE Computer Society; Volume: 12; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês

ISSN

1436-4522

Autores

Catherine S. Fichten, Vittoria Ferraro, Jennison V. Asuncion, Caroline Chwojka, Maria Barile, Mai Nhu Nguyen, Ryan Klomp, Joan Wolforth,

Tópico(s)

Assistive Technology in Communication and Mobility

Resumo

This study explored e-learning problems and solutions reported by 223 students with disabilities, 58 campus disability service providers, 28 professors, and 33 e-learning professionals from Canadian colleges and universities. All four groups indicated, via online questionnaires, problems with: accessibility of websites and course/learning management systems (CMS); accessibility of digital audio and video; inflexible time limits built into online exams; PowerPoint/data projection during lectures; course materials in PDF, and lack of needed adaptive technologies. Students also mentioned technical difficulties using e-learning and connecting to websites and CMS, problems downloading and opening files, web pages that would not load, video clips taking too long to download, poor use of e-learning by professors and their own lack of knowledge working with elearning. Disability service providers, too, mentioned the poor use of e-learning by professors as well as poor accessibility of course notes and materials in many formats. E-learning professionals noted difficulties with inaccessible course notes and materials. Professors identified mainly problems raised by the other groups. Sixtyseven percent of students, 53% of service providers, 36% of e-learning professionals and 35% of professors indicated that at least one of their three e-learning problems remained unresolved. We discuss how the different roles and perspectives of the four participant groups influence their views, and make recommendations addressing identified common e-learning problems.

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