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

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.

[1]  Roli Varma Attracting Native Americans to computing , 2009, Commun. ACM.

[2]  Alexander Repenning Programming goes back to school , 2012, CACM.

[3]  Mark Guzdial,et al.  Success in introductory programming: what works? , 2013, CACM.

[4]  Beth Lameman,et al.  Skins 1.0: a curriculum for designing games with first nations youth , 2010, Future Play.

[5]  R. Estrella,et al.  Stuck in the Shallow End Education , Race , and Computing , 2008 .

[6]  Michael Eisenberg,et al.  The LilyPad Arduino: Toward Wearable Engineering for Everyone , 2008, IEEE Pervasive Computing.

[7]  Leah Buechley,et al.  Textile messages : dispatches from the world of e-textiles and education , 2013 .

[8]  Victoria Hand,et al.  From the Court to the Classroom: Opportunities for Engagement, Learning, and Identity in Basketball and Classroom Mathematics , 2008 .

[9]  Juan E. Gilbert,et al.  Toward culturally responsive computing education , 2013, CACM.

[10]  Denice Ward Hood,et al.  CompuGirls: designing a culturally relevant technology program , 2009 .

[11]  Deborah A. Fields,et al.  Cupcake cushions, scooby doo shirts, and soft boomboxes: e-textiles in high school to promote computational concepts, practices, and perceptions , 2013, SIGCSE '13.

[12]  Andrew C. Gordon,et al.  Native American technology access: the Gates Foundation in Four Corners , 2003, Electron. Libr..

[13]  Ron Eglash,et al.  Ethnocomputing with Native American Design , 2007 .

[14]  Jeannette M. Wing An introduction to computer science for non-majors using principles of computation , 2007, SIGCSE.

[15]  Joanna Goode,et al.  Beyond access: broadening participation in high school computer science , 2012, INROADS.

[16]  Luis C. Moll,et al.  Funds of knowledge: Theorizing practices in households, communities, and classrooms , 2005 .

[17]  R. Parmentier Wisdom Sits in Places: Landscape and Language among the Western Apache. , 1997 .

[18]  Amon Millner,et al.  Modkit: blending and extending approachable platforms for creating computer programs and interactive objects , 2011, IDC.

[19]  Joanna Goode,et al.  If You Build Teachers, Will Students Come? The Role of Teachers in Broadening Computer Science Learning for Urban Youth , 2007 .

[20]  M. Eisenhart,et al.  Red-Eared Sliders and Neighborhood Dogs: Creating Third Spaces to Support Ethnic Girls' Interests in Technological and Scientific Expertise , 2023, Children, Youth and Environments.

[21]  William L. Anderson,et al.  Weaving New Worlds: Southeastern Cherokee Women and Their Basketry. , 1997 .

[22]  Bryan M. J. Brayboy,et al.  Culturally Responsive Schooling for Indigenous Youth: A Review of the Literature , 2008 .

[23]  Audrey Bennett,et al.  Teaching with Hidden Capital: Agency in Children's Computational Explorations of Cornrow Hairstyles , 2023, Children, Youth and Environments.

[24]  Erkki Sutinen,et al.  Ethnocomputing: ICT in cultural and social context , 2006, CACM.