Generative Artificial Intelligence learning agency learning disability secondary school
Despite increasing interest in using Generative Artificial Intelligence (GenAI) in education, little is known about how students with disability engage with GenAI to support their own learning. This study investigates the potential of ChatGPT to support the learning agency of adolescents with disability in a secondary science classroom in Australia. Guided by sociocultural and socio-material conceptualisations of agency, the study explored the mediated choices and capabilities of three students with disability to use ChatGPT to facilitate their learning. The study was conducted in a class comprising students of varying ages clinically diagnosed with diverse learning needs. Data sources included student interviews, the students' conversations with ChatGPT, teachers' lesson worksheets and video recordings of the lesson. Thematic analyses reveal that while students expressed clear and meaningful choices to use ChatGPT to support their learning, they faced metacognitive challenges and cognitive constraints, resulting in a misalignment between their choices and actual capability. The findings identify key theoretical perspectives and practical considerations for supporting students with disability in using GenAI to develop their learning agency. The study recommends customising GenAI for specific learning needs in line with its function as a cognitive prosthesis for students with disability and for better alignment with Universal Design for Learning, thereby supporting students' learning agency.
Details
Title
Can Generative AI support the learning agency of students with disability? A case study of an Australian secondary school
Authors/Creators
Natasha Anne Rappa - Murdoch University, School of Education
Karen P. Nonis - Curtin University
Kok Sing Tang - Curtin University
Grant Cooper - Curtin University
Martin Cooper - Curtin University
Craig Sims - Curtin University
Publication Details
British journal of educational technology, Early View
Publisher
John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Educational Research Association.
Number of pages
19
Grant note
Curtin University of Technology (http://data.elsevier.com/vocabulary/SciValFunders/501100001797)
School of Education
Curtin University