News Release

ASU program aims to improve access to STEM classes for blind, visually impaired students

3D models provide enhanced tactile materials to help students learn class material

Business Announcement

Arizona State University

Ashleigh Gonzales, Arizona State University

image: ASU senior Ashleigh Gonzales tests new 3-D tactile boards that will be used in basic STEM courses. Gonzales, who is blind, is part of an ASU research team developing the materials. view more 

Credit: Jacob Mayfield

TEMPE, Ariz. – Arizona State University is kicking off a pilot program aimed at improving access to Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math (STEM) classes for students who are blind or visually impaired. Called 3D-IMAGINE (Image Arrays to Graphically Implement New Education), the program will use 3-dimensional materials to enhance independent learning. Researchers are seeking as many program participants as possible from both ASU and the wider community.

Beginning biology (100) and astronomy (113) lab classes will each have one section utilizing new, 3D tactile boards designed specifically for students who are blind or visually impaired. However, sighted students may use the materials as well.

"Textbook images typically contain important messages, whether it's intensity or altitude, or cell structure," said Rogier Windhdorst, Regents' and Foundation Professor in ASU's School of Earth & Space Exploration. "We think these messages can be conveyed in a 3D tactile just fine. While a person who is blind would have to sense the information, we believe 3D images may open up a new world in STEM courses for students who are visually impaired."

To test their theory, an ASU interdisciplinary research team developed a series of 3D tactile boards that represent key textbook images. Students need to understand these images in order to successfully complete each science class. Made of high-density plastic, the boards will initially cost about 60 dollars each, and be used in place of or in addition to traditional lab materials.

The goal is to provide an opportunity for students who are blind or visually impaired, to learn the material independently.

College level STEM courses are typically rigorous, but for blind or visually impaired students, these classes often present even greater challenges. Imagine taking an astronomy class having to depend on someone else to accurately and effectively describe a photo of a nebula, or in biology, detail the image of a cell.

The idea to turn digital images into 3D tactile representations originated in Debra Baluch's upper level Cell Biotechnology class. Baluch, a research scientist in ASU's School of Life Sciences in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, taught junior Ashleigh Gonzales last spring. Gonzales is pursing a degree in Molecular Biosciences and Biotechnology, and is visually impaired.

"She is just as capable as anyone else in the class of doing this level of science, but unfortunately, her visual impairment creates a barrier," said Baluch. "What she chooses as a career may be decided by her visual impairment, even though she has the same level of education as her peers. We can improve access to our STEM classes by providing these 3D models which we expect will enhance independent learning in students who are visually impaired."

"Accessible is an interesting term," said Terri Hedgpeth, director of ASU's Disability Resource Center. "When a student signs up for a class, we get the textbook and convert it into Braille or electronic text, and we render tactile diagrams that go along with it. That's time consuming and expensive," she added. "What we are doing in this pilot program allows us to create 3-D models which provide a better tactile representation of the material. It's very different from the line pictures we typically produce."

If the pilot program is successful, the team hopes to lay the foundation for using the 3D tactile boards in all 100 level STEM courses. The group is currently seeking funding from the National Science Foundation and other organizations to support the program.

"I would like to see students be inspired to take additional classes in STEM and consider majors in the STEM fields," said Hedgpeth. "Maybe we can excite them a bit and raise their hopes for a better level of access."

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The team includes researchers from School of Life Sciences, School of Earth & Space Exploration, the Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering, and Disability Resource Center.

Note:

For more information on 3D IMAGINE, contact Rogier Windhorst at rogier.windhorst@asu.edu, or Debra Baluch at page.baluch@asu.edu. To participate in the Biology 100 and Astronomy 113 classes, contact Cindy Jepsen at cindy.jepsen@asu.edu, (480) 965-1232.


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