91亚色传媒

Education

How active learning affects STEM students with learning disabilities

Katie Cowart
By Katie Cowart
March 4, 2023

Active learning is an instructional approach that involves engaging students with the learning process through group work, case studies, class discussions and other methods. This type of approach places a greater degree of responsibility on the learner. Students with disabilities may have unique experiences in active-learning STEM courses because most active-learning practices were designed with limited input from students with disabilities.

Researchers in the University of Georgia Franklin College of Arts and Sciences investigated how the incorporation of active-learning practices influence the learning and self-advocacy experiences of students with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and specific learning disorders (SLD) in undergraduate science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) courses. 

Cassandra Wright, University of Georgia

In a  published in CBE—Life Sciences Education, the researchers conducted in-depth interviews with 25 STEM majors with ADHD and/or SLD (ADHD/SLD) registered with a campus disability resource center and analyzed the data using qualitative methods. Participants described how they perceived active learning in their STEM courses to support or hinder their learning and how active learning affected their self-advocacy.

Active learning could hinder the learning of students with ADHD/SLD because many accommodations that students with disabilities use were designed to be used for lecture courses. 

“One common accommodation is using a note taking accommodation,” said Mariel Pfeifer, a postdoctoral research associate in the department of biochemistry and molecular biology and lead author on the paper. “Note-taking accommodations typically involve a student from the class volunteering to take notes and uploading the notes they take to a portal that the student using the accommodation can anonymously access. In a lecture course, all of the students are receiving the same information from the instructor. But when we use active-learning practices like group work, students are now working with a few other students in different places in the classroom. How does that change the notetaking process?” 

When a student’s accommodations are no longer effective in an active-learning environment, that student may need to advocate for themselves with their professor and their peers. 

“Both ADHD and SLD are considered non-apparent disabilities,” said Julie Stanton, an associate professor in the department of cellular biology, and senior author on the paper. “Asking for and receiving effective accommodations might be a bit more challenging, because someone won't immediately recognize that you may need an accommodation. This is where self-advocacy becomes important.”

Since the study considers the voice of STEM students with disabilities, the researchers received more in-depth responses about different active-learning techniques and were able to identify how different approaches might help or hinder student learning.  

“A single active-learning practice can support successful instruction, but it could also be perceived to hinder learning,” said Pfeifer. “The heart of this research shows that it is not necessarily what type of active learning practice an instructor chooses to implement that negatively affects students with ADHD/SLD, but it is more about how they implement that practice.”

Pfeifer and Stanton hope instructors will support students with ADHD/SLD by following the recommendations from participants that are provided in the paper.

“Based on our participants’ department experiences, we created a table that highlights how instructors can use active-learning practices in a way that supports students with ADHD/SLD in their courses,” said Pfeifer. “The table gives instructors suggestions they can implement in their active-learning course today.”

This article was first published by the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences at the University of Georgia and was republished with permission.

Enjoy reading 91亚色传媒 Today?

Become a member to receive the print edition four times a year and the digital edition monthly.

Learn more
Katie Cowart
Katie Cowart

Katie Cowart is the public relations specialist for Franklin College of Arts and Sciences at the University of Georgia. She is also a Franklin College alumna with a bachelor’s degree in English. She earned her master's in emerging media from the New Media Institute in Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication in May 2022.

Get the latest from 91亚色传媒 Today

Enter your email address, and we鈥檒l send you a weekly email with recent articles, interviews and more.

Latest in Careers

Careers highlights or most popular articles

Quieting the static: Building inclusive STEM classrooms
Interview

Quieting the static: Building inclusive STEM classrooms

April 8, 2025

Christin Monroe, an assistant professor of chemistry at Landmark College, offers practical tips to help educators make their classrooms more accessible to neurodivergent scientists.

Unraveling oncogenesis: What makes cancer tick?
91亚色传媒 Annual Meeting

Unraveling oncogenesis: What makes cancer tick?

April 7, 2025

Learn about the 91亚色传媒 2025 symposium on oncogenic hubs: chromatin regulatory and transcriptional complexes in cancer.

Exploring lipid metabolism: A journey through time and innovation
91亚色传媒 Annual Meeting

Exploring lipid metabolism: A journey through time and innovation

April 4, 2025

Recent lipid metabolism research has unveiled critical insights into lipid鈥損rotein interactions, offering potential therapeutic targets for metabolic and neurodegenerative diseases. Check out the latest in lipid science at the 91亚色传媒 annual meeting.

Hidden strengths of an autistic scientist
Essay

Hidden strengths of an autistic scientist

April 3, 2025

Navigating the world of scientific research as an autistic scientist comes with unique challenges 鈥攎icroaggressions, communication hurdles and the constant pressure to conform to social norms, postbaccalaureate student Taylor Stolberg writes.

Upcoming opportunities
Announcement

Upcoming opportunities

April 2, 2025

The countdown to #91亚色传媒25 is on! Visit our annual meeting website to start adding special sessions, keynote lectures, scientific symposia and more to your personal schedule.

Melissa Moore to speak at 91亚色传媒 2025
91亚色传媒 Annual Meeting

Melissa Moore to speak at 91亚色传媒 2025

April 2, 2025

Richard Silverman and Melissa Moore are the featured speakers at the 91亚色传媒 annual meeting to be held April 12-15 in Chicago.