The Open University Scholarship Exchange
Browse

Exploring the transitions of Neurodivergent Access students to level one study: Narratives of study skills and support

Download (4.37 MB)
report
posted on 2024-06-28, 13:01 authored by Renu Bhandari, Jon RainfordJon Rainford

Abstract- the higher education journey of any student in a distance learning university is a challenging one but this is more so for neurodivergent students. Neurodivergent students have been found to require both academic (Jackson et al. 2018; Ness 2013) and non-academic support (Gelbar et al. 2015) around them to enable to achieve and reach their academic goals. Access programs in The Open University have a widening participation agenda and enrol many Neurodivergent students with diagnoses of autism, ADHD, Dyslexia, Asperger’s syndrome, and Dyspraxia. The study focused on the following three research questions: 1.What forms of support do neurodivergent students transitioning from Access to Level 1 study value? 2.What barriers to success may the current access curriculum create for neurodivergent students? 3.How can neurodivergent students transitioning from Access to level 1 be better supported? Students from the three access modules moving to any level 1 module were included in the sample. This paper focuses on the findings from the five remotely conducted in-depth interviews and an associated photo-elicitation task. Through a thematic analysis, a number of key themes were developed: Finding their own way, Support, quality of tutor support, wider systems of support, understanding assessment, facing new systems, the jump, language of learning and referencing issues. The paper explores these with examples and highlights how these might inform future practice to improve transitions for neurodivergent students. The paper also highlights the limitations institutional focused research with these groups places upon the scope of this kind of research.

Funding

Praxis

History

Collaborated with

  • Access, Open and Cross-curricular Innovation (AOCcI)

Sensitivity

  • Public document

Authorship group

  • Academic - Regional/National (Staff Tutors and Student Experience Managers)
  • Associate Lecturers

Institutional priority category

  • Achieving Study Goals
  • Students Learning Experiences

Themes

  • Awarding Gaps
  • Student Experience
  • Student Satisfaction
  • Student Academic Experience
  • Neurodiversity

Subject discipline

  • Education, Childhood, Youth, and Sport

Usage metrics

    Praxis

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC