Tim Barlott, PhD

Lab Director | Assistant Professor



Department of Occupational Therapy, Faculty of Rehabilitation Medicine

University of Alberta

2-64 Corbett Hall
Edmonton, AB



A transactional perspective on the everyday use of technology by people with learning disabilities


Journal article


T. Barlott, Paige MacKenzie, Damian le Goullon, Liam Campbell, J. Setchell
Journal of Occupational Science, 2021

Semantic Scholar DOI
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APA   Click to copy
Barlott, T., MacKenzie, P., le Goullon, D., Campbell, L., & Setchell, J. (2021). A transactional perspective on the everyday use of technology by people with learning disabilities. Journal of Occupational Science.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Barlott, T., Paige MacKenzie, Damian le Goullon, Liam Campbell, and J. Setchell. “A Transactional Perspective on the Everyday Use of Technology by People with Learning Disabilities.” Journal of Occupational Science (2021).


MLA   Click to copy
Barlott, T., et al. “A Transactional Perspective on the Everyday Use of Technology by People with Learning Disabilities.” Journal of Occupational Science, 2021.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{t2021a,
  title = {A transactional perspective on the everyday use of technology by people with learning disabilities},
  year = {2021},
  journal = {Journal of Occupational Science},
  author = {Barlott, T. and MacKenzie, Paige and le Goullon, Damian and Campbell, Liam and Setchell, J.}
}

Abstract

ABSTRACT Research points to the potential benefit of information and communication technologies (ICTs) for people with learning disabilities. However, there has been limited exploration of the interconnected nature of people and social context when considering how people with learning disabilities use ICTs. The result has been an overemphasis on (and assumptions of) the skill limitations and individual capacity of people with learning disabilities and their use of ICTs. Using a transactional perspective based on the work of John Dewey, this study aimed to explore the interrelationship of people with learning disabilities, ICTs, and the social world. Using a post-qualitative and theory-driven approach, we employed a transactional perspective (namely the interrelated concepts of embodiment, habit, and growth) to analyse interview data from 10 adult participants with learning disabilities. Our analysis suggested that when people have access and opportunity to co-mingle with technology, the technology can become embodied (feel like a part of them). ICTs were found to become an extension of participants’ bodies, enhancing their literacy, learning, and connection with others. Introducing the concept of conjoint action, we explored how human and nonhuman bodies are enmeshed in the formation of what we typically think of as human habits. Participants developed more-than-human habits of ICT use that they drew from to coordinate with their everyday life, navigating everyday challenges. Yet, in restrictive social contexts (or those influenced by underlying assumptions of the vulnerability of people with learning disabilities), participants were less likely to embody ICTs in the rhythms of everyday life and experience benefits of ICT use. Our findings shed light on the entangled, transactional relationship of people and the social world, and present occupation as the conjoint action of human and nonhuman bodies.



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