Structured abstractPurpose of this paper: The paper reflects on engaging young autistic people in the participatory design of the Autism&Uni online toolkit. The purpose of the toolkit is to provide autistic students with information and strategies for dealing with the challenges they may encounter when entering higher education. The study adds to existing research on participatory design by considering the specific needs and contributions of autistic people who are of average or higher intelligence, academically competent and generally articulate, a group that has received limited attention hitherto.Design/methodology/approach: The research used a 5-step Design Thinking approach and engaged multiple stakeholders at different points. The paper covers the whole process, paying particular attention to the final two steps of prototyping and testing. During three participatory design workshops, autistic people acted as codesigners and co-creators.
Findings:The workshops were effective in engaging participants in various design activities and rich discussions. Several assumptions about capabilities and preferences of autistic people were challenged. Design Thinking proved a suitable framework for involving this group in the creation of solutions that serve their needs.
Research limitations/implications:Because of the low number of workshop participants (11), research results may lack generalisability. Also, the workshop format with its focus on group activities may discourage some autistic people to take part. Further work is needed to explore this and to confirm the reported findings.
Practical implications:The paper offers practical advice regarding how to involve autistic people in co-design activities.
Social implications:The research contributes to a strength-based view of autism, rather than one that focuses on deficits.Originality/value: The paper provides new perspectives on the strengths of autistic people in participatory design settings, with a focus on those autistic people who are of average or higher intelligence and able to communicate effectively.
This essay aims to illustrate how the concept of Òdigital dissensusÓ (Penny Andrews in An Xiao Mina 2018) applies to the current state of politics and the public sphere, exacerbated by international ÒlockdownsÓ as a result of COVID-19. The digital dissensus describes the current period in politics, where the liberal consensus of the 1980s onwards has collapsed and the internet and social media have become forums for noisy debate and extremist voices. The essay
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.