The Accessible Toolbox
A ÓûÂþɬ team of researchers is providing new resources to make learning statistics more accessible to students with disabilities.
A ÓûÂþɬ team of researchers is providing new resources for educators and their students, reports the Association for Psychological Science Teaching Fund Showcase. The ÓûÂþɬ team aims to make learning statistics more accessible to students with disabilities.
Associate Professor of Psychology and Education Jared Schwartzer and Natasha Anderson and Nicole Gilbert Cote, laboratory instructors in the psychology and education department, have developed to deliver a multitude of resources for instructors to better address the needs of students with disabilities and various other barriers to success with statistics.
The team created a peer-reviewed website that delivers a multitude of resources for instructors to better address the needs of students with disabilities including visual impairments, learning disabilities, math-related anxiety and other barriers to student success with statistics. These resources serve the higher education psychology community by reducing the burden placed on instructors to self-educate and prepare new content to address newly emerging accessibility needs.
The website also features and their advice for instructors who teach students with learning differences.
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