2014
DOI: 10.2140/involve.2014.7.247
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Undergraduate research in mathematics with deaf and hard-of-hearing students: four perspectives

Abstract: (Communicated by Darren A. Narayan)Involving more deaf and hard-of-hearing students in undergraduate research is a step toward getting more such students into STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) careers. Since evidence exists that undergraduate research improves retention, especially for some underrepresented groups that have low retention rates -as, for example, deaf and hard-of-hearing STEM majors -it is a particularly pertinent step to keep interested students in these career paths. Nune… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Gottardis et al (2011) argues that deaf students lag behind their hearing peers in mathematics. Thus, there needs to be increased attention and encouragement to reform mathematics in deaf education (Pagliaro, 1998;Adler et al, 2014). On the other hands, it is of great importance that deaf children have adequate access to mathematical thinking, but unfortunately, most deaf children show a severe delay in mathematics learning that has been persistent over many years (Nunes, 2014).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Gottardis et al (2011) argues that deaf students lag behind their hearing peers in mathematics. Thus, there needs to be increased attention and encouragement to reform mathematics in deaf education (Pagliaro, 1998;Adler et al, 2014). On the other hands, it is of great importance that deaf children have adequate access to mathematical thinking, but unfortunately, most deaf children show a severe delay in mathematics learning that has been persistent over many years (Nunes, 2014).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…According to the National Science Foundation (2013), there is a leakage in the pipeline between undergraduate enrollment and earned doctoral degrees for Deaf students (CEOSE, 2012). While some students may opt out of pursuing graduate degrees, research does illuminate how undergraduate experiences in STEM fields contributes to students’ desire to pursue careers in STEM (Adler, Jacob, Kurz, & Kushalnagar, 2014; Gregerman, Lerner, von Hippel, Jonides, & Nagda, 1998; Hurtado, Cabrera, Arellano, & Espionosa, 2008).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In university settings, Deaf students, faculty, and staff are often faced with communicative challenges, because of the availability of skilled sign language interpreters to support access to academic discourse and culture (Adler et al, 2014; Woodcock, Rohan, & Campbell, 2007). Approximately 45% of postsecondary Deaf students require sign language interpreters in the classroom (Walter, 2010).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the United States, 2,500-3,000 college students with hearing loss attend specialist tertiary institutions, where they receive a whole range of support services such as sign language interpreters, lipspeakers, and captioning [1]. But support services at mainstream colleges attended by the other 96-99 percent of college students with hearing loss vary in terms of depth and coverage [3].…”
Section: Accessibility: Small Steps But Leaps For Mankindmentioning
confidence: 99%