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Instructors improve the accessibility of geology

Instructors improve the accessibility of geology

CU 抖阴传媒在线 geologists are addressing one of their field鈥檚 big struggles, accommodating people with physical limitations


Emily Fairfax fainted when she started her PhD in geology at the 抖阴传媒在线 in 2015.听

She was out in the field near 抖阴传媒在线, and it was a hot day. 鈥淲e were standing and walking to another stop, standing and walking to another stop,鈥 she said.听

Fairfax and Brown

Megan Brown and Emily Fairfax stand in front of a Stegosaurus skeleton in CU 抖阴传媒在线鈥檚 Jerry Crail Johnson Earth Sciences & Map Library. Photo by Lucas Joel. At the top of the page, reserchers on Vesuvio Crater in Italy check instruments and a solar panel to take data for geological science. iStockphoto.

Then she zonked out.

It was听听first brush with geology, and it was after she fainted that she had the realization, in conversation with her then-fellow graduate student,听, that geology has a problem:听

It can be adventurous, like a series of posters in a travel agency that advertise exotic getaways鈥Trek the depths of an active volcano,听Hike the Himalayas鈥攁nd it can also be inaccessible听for those for whom going to such places is, for whatever reason, impossible. The thought that they听must听be able to take these journeys to study geology can stop a budding career in its tracks.听

And, for that reason, the geosciences have the听听among the physical sciences of students with physical disabilities, one researcher reported

鈥淗ow does one change culture?鈥 asked Fairfax, who is now an assistant professor at California State University Channel Islands鈥攑articularly when the outdoors form the bedrock of geology鈥檚 culture.

Her answer and Brown鈥檚: By changing it where students first meet that culture, in the classroom with a teacher. According to Fairfax and Brown, who detailed their field鈥檚 accessibility problem in May in the听, instructors like teaching assistants and professors do not get the training they need to showcase geology as the kind of field that takes all kinds.

We all lose out when we have a prescribed norm for what a geologist looks like or does.鈥

Geology, though, is not just about daring fieldwork. Brown, now an assistant professor at Northern Illinois University, studies hydrogeology, and she spends much of her time creating models on a computer. Students interested in the geosciences, she thinks, need to understand that there are valuable contributions that a geologist can make without ever donning hiking books or holstering a rock hammer on their belt.听

Students who can鈥檛 trek into a volcano are not anomalies; they are an asset waiting to study the volcano or mountain from a different vantage, according to Brown.听听

And instructors, she and Fairfax explained, need to introduce this view of geology before students learn to view it in a less inclusive way, which is why the duo advocate for designing curricula and teaching classes in a way that shines a light on all students and their diversity of abilities.听

The two trained instructors using scenarios stemming from actual experiences, like when Fairfax taught a geology class where students needed to get outside and go to 抖阴传媒在线 Creek, where they needed to wade into the water to take measurements.听

One student, she found, had a fear: getting into the running water. It was 贵补颈谤蹿补虫鈥檚 fainting moment, but in a different guise, and she didn鈥檛 have a plan. (Must be able to wade into rushing water, the travel poster read.)

The main thing, said Fairfax, is for instructors to ask themselves what in this class might be inaccessible and, if anything inaccessible arises, then, 鈥淭As need to have a contingency plan.鈥 For the creek scenario, an adjustment could be to create a new part of the assignment that involves collecting data from the shore, and that new part of the assignment must be an option for all students鈥攏ot just those who can鈥檛 go in the creek.

After they trained accessibility to the instructors in CU 抖阴传媒在线鈥檚 Department of Geological Sciences, Fairfax and Brown surveyed students and found that the number of students approaching instructors about accessibility needs increased compared to previous years. This could be a sign that those students will be less tempted to drift away from the field.

鈥淲e all lose out when we have a prescribed norm for what a geologist looks like or does,鈥 said Brown. After all, it took someone fainting鈥攏ot someone summiting some high peak鈥攆or a field to reexamine itself, and to evolve.听