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Ethnocomputing with electronic textiles: culturally responsive open design to broaden participation in computing in American indian youth and communities

Published:05 March 2014Publication History

ABSTRACT

There have been many efforts to increase access and participation of indigenous communities in computer science education using ethnocomputing. In this paper, we extend culturally responsive computing by using electronic textiles that leverage traditional crafting and sewing practices to help students learn about engineering and computing as they also engage with local indigenous knowledges. Electronic textiles include sewable microcontrollers that can be connected to sensors and actuators by stitching circuits with conductive thread. We present findings from a junior high Native Arts class and an academically-oriented summer camp in which Native American youth ages 12-15 years created individual and collective e-textile designs using the LilyPad Arduino. In our discussion we address how a culturally responsive open design approach to ethnocomputing with e-textile activities can provide a productive but also challenging context for design agency and cultural connections for American Indian youth, and how these findings can inform the design of a broader range of introductory computational activities for all.

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      • Published in

        cover image ACM Conferences
        SIGCSE '14: Proceedings of the 45th ACM technical symposium on Computer science education
        March 2014
        800 pages
        ISBN:9781450326056
        DOI:10.1145/2538862

        Copyright © 2014 ACM

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        Association for Computing Machinery

        New York, NY, United States

        Publication History

        • Published: 5 March 2014

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        SIGCSE '14 Paper Acceptance Rate 108 of 274 submissions, 39%Overall Acceptance Rate 1,488 of 4,227 submissions, 35%

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