Neurodivergent Fields: A Study on Critical Disability Physics Identity Development of Neurodivergent Nonacademic Physicists
POSTER
Abstract
Recent data indicates that neurodivergent students make up approximately 20% of disabled students, and the rate at which neurodivergent students enter college is increasing. However, this number may be revealed to be much higher as neurodiversity gains more acceptance in a broader academic context. Despite the increasing rate of neurodivergent students entering college, the rate at which these students drop out of college or leave their field is dramatically higher than their non-disabled peers. This is especially concerning physics and other STEM disciplines, where neurodivergent students are represented at much higher rates when compared to other fields. Recent literature in disability education suggests that by encouraging disability identity development and engendering advocacy in students, we can mitigate this loss of students and cultivate the new perspectives towards physics that they bring. One way to do this is through understanding their Critical Disability Physics Identity (CDPI). I present a study which examines neurodivergent CDPI development, and present preliminary data on the identity development of neurodivergent physicists who have left the field.
Publication: Published: L. G. E. McDermott, Introducing political disability identity as a framework for studying disability in physics, 2022 PERC Proceedings [Grand Rapids, MI, July 13-14, 2022], edited by B. W. Frank, D. L. Jones, and Q. X. Ryan, doi:10.1119/perc.2022.pr.McDermott.<br>Planned: Introducing Neurodiversity to the Physics Education Community, Operationalizing a Critical Disability Physics Identity by Examining Neurodivergent Physicists at Various Stages of Career.
Presenters
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Liam G McDermott
Rutgers University
Authors
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Liam G McDermott
Rutgers University