Taylor, the Disability Disclosure Virtual Assistant: A Case Study of Participatory Research with Disabled Students
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Phase 1: Creating a Student-Driven Research Agenda
2.2. Phase 2: Exploring the Issue of Administrative Burden
2.3. Phase 3: Co-Designing a Solution
3. Results
3.1. Findings from Phase 1: Student-Driven Research Agenda
- Disability disclosure, including fear of telling people about hidden issues.
- Access to information, disabled students not knowing or understanding their rights.
- Understanding the varied sources of help available to students and working to improve those.
- Barriers created by restricted channels of communication, such as written forms or phone calls. Exploring how alternatives should be provided.
- More flexible assistance, such as non-medical helper support for study that did not need formal arrangements.
- Greater flexibility in deadlines and course schedules to support study at different rates.
- Inaccessibility of assessments, lack of effective adjustments made in relation to assessments, and problems in organising reasonable adjustments.
- Measuring and researching the amount of time disabled people spend on processes like declaring a disability, applying for Disabled Students Allowance, the UK government Personal Independence Payments, and others. How does this affect their studies or well-being? Could data on this burden be used to address the inequities found in study?
- Investigating the ways in which organisational processes require people to use a particular communication channel (e.g., only allowing certain actions by phone, email or in-person) and what impact this has on disabled people.
- Investigating how study support interventions, such as mentors, or peer support groups, can improve disabled students’ study experiences.
- Interrogating the elements that make study flexible and understanding how these benefit disabled students.
- Investigating the extent to which the social model of disability is understood and accepted, and what the barriers are to it having a greater impact.
- Exploring how disabled people feel about the language used to describe disability, particularly in disclosure processes, and what language they use themselves when they interact with different people or situations.
3.2. Findings from Phase 2: Administrative Burden
‘The really annoying thing is I can’t fill the forms in myself because Dolphin and Dragon, when used together, don’t work with the forms, especially the boxes in the forms. You can’t click on the bit you’re supposed to click on. That means I have to pay my carer £11.50 an hour to do it for me. And it’s not just the money, it’s actually really embarrassing having to tell a stranger things about yourself and your disability so they can fill in the forms.’
‘When you’re new, or you don’t know the ropes or what it is you’re supposed to do, it’s horrible, it’s very confusing and stressful. It’s like everyone knows the system and it’s working against you, but you don’t know how to work it and you’re fumbling in the dark.’
‘After the assessment, they don’t tell you how long you have to wait until you find out what you’ve been awarded. There’s no time limit. It’s awful, as your course start date gets nearer and nearer you get more and more agitated about it.’
‘Stress affects my condition and makes it worse, so I’m finding that as I’m getting more agitated, my condition’s getting worse, too, and it’s affecting my daily life’
‘And all the time you’re waiting you’re thinking about it. How will this affect my life. Everything you’ve got, everything you do, you’re thinking how much longer will I have this for? What happens if I have to live without it? How will I manage, how will I cope? It’s like you’re an insect under a magnifying glass. You’ve got no power’
‘My PIP letter came through on the day on my exam. I have my exam at home, and I was writing the exam and I heard the letterbox go and saw the brown envelope. I couldn’t stop thinking about it. I couldn’t focus on the exam. I was thinking, everything is there, my whole future is in that envelope. I had to ask my invigilator to put it where I couldn’t see it’
‘Every year I waste time and money filling in details on forms, the same details the OU have already got, such as my name and address and information about my disability. I’m paraplegic, it’s not going to change! Then I have to pay for a doctor’s letter to prove it, too, which is more money and hassle.’
‘One form leads to another, they’re like dominoes, once you start and you push one, they just all knock onto each other and they all go flat. Each form leads to another form, each process leads to another process… I still need to fill in the forms every year, even though I’m not entitled to anything anymore. I’m not allowed to stop. Actually, I should do more.
My condition’s changed, I’ve been diagnosed with something else, but I’m not telling the university because I just don’t want to go through the hassle of a reassessment.’
3.3. Findings from Phase 3: Co-Designing a Solution
- Accessibility
- Appearance and personality
- Conversation design
- Bi-directional dialogue
- Human support
- Transparency
- Accessibility
- Appearance and personality
- Conversation design
- Transparency
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Type of Impact | Positive/Very Positive Effect | No Effect | Negative/Very Negative Effect | N/A |
---|---|---|---|---|
Effect on time spent on studies | 14.4% | 47.1% | 37.5% | 1.0% |
Quality of your coursework assignments | 15.4% | 51.9% | 25.9% | 6.7% |
Ability to succeed in exams | 14.4% | 34.6% | 17.4% | 33.7% |
Mental health | 7.7% | 40.4% | 45.2% | 6.7% |
Physical health or wellbeing | 6.7% | 46.2% | 37.5% | 9.6% |
Stress levels | 5.7% | 29.8% | 61.5% | 2.9% |
Effect on your disabilities | 9.6% | 41.3% | 41.3% | 7.7% |
Effect of dealing with OU processes on impression of the university | 42.3% | 26.0% | 27.9% | 3.8% |
Effect of dealing with council or government processes on impression of those departments | 6.7% | 18.3% | 50.9% | 24.0% |
Question | Challenging or Very Challenging | No Strong Opinion | Straightforward or Very Straightforward | N/A |
---|---|---|---|---|
Administrative processes necessary in everyday life (such as paying bills or banking) | 24.8% | 17.4% | 52.3% | 5.5% |
General processes at the Open University (such as registering for a module or updating your address) | 18.4% | 12.8% | 68.8% | 0.0% |
Disability-related processes at the Open University (such as declaring a disability or asking for an adjustment to be made) | 33.9% | 19.3% | 42.2% | 4.6% |
Disability-related processes outside of the Open University (such as applying for PIP, or a blue parking badge) | 48.6% | 11.9% | 12.9% | 26.6% |
Administrative processes where you need to communicate with both the OU and with other organisations in order to complete them (such as applying for DSA) | 45.0% | 16.5% | 18.3% | 20.2% |
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Lister, K.; Coughlan, T.; Kenny, I.; Tudor, R.; Iniesto, F. Taylor, the Disability Disclosure Virtual Assistant: A Case Study of Participatory Research with Disabled Students. Educ. Sci. 2021, 11, 587. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci11100587
Lister K, Coughlan T, Kenny I, Tudor R, Iniesto F. Taylor, the Disability Disclosure Virtual Assistant: A Case Study of Participatory Research with Disabled Students. Education Sciences. 2021; 11(10):587. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci11100587
Chicago/Turabian StyleLister, Kate, Tim Coughlan, Ian Kenny, Ruth Tudor, and Francisco Iniesto. 2021. "Taylor, the Disability Disclosure Virtual Assistant: A Case Study of Participatory Research with Disabled Students" Education Sciences 11, no. 10: 587. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci11100587
APA StyleLister, K., Coughlan, T., Kenny, I., Tudor, R., & Iniesto, F. (2021). Taylor, the Disability Disclosure Virtual Assistant: A Case Study of Participatory Research with Disabled Students. Education Sciences, 11(10), 587. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci11100587