"And BAM. You Have a Connection”: Blind/Partially Blind Students and the Belonging in Academia Model

Laura Yvonne Bulk
, Tal Jarus
, Laura Nimmon

Abstract

Belonging has significant impacts on success in postsecondary. Blind people are underrepresented in postsecondary and lack equitable opportunities to develop a sense of belonging. To build a better understanding of this underrepresented experience, this study shares narratives of 28 Blind students from across Turtle Island (and what is colonially called Canada) using Teng et al.’s (2020) Belonging in Academia Model (BAM) as a conceptual framework. Thematically analyzed findings suggest that blind students’ perspectives offer nuance to the BAM’s conceptualization of how belonging develops. For blind students, external factors such as class size are especially important in determining affiliation with an institution. Blind students elucidated the importance of familiarity with different ways of being in the world, including blindness. Third, acceptance involved having their blind embraced in postsecondary contexts. Forth, interdependence was key to building trusting connections for blind students. Fifth, blind participants discussed equity at length related to access, the added work of trying to obtain access, and the emotional work involved. This study helps fill a gap regarding the experiences of these traditionally underrepresented postsecondary students in Canada. The BAM may raise the consciousness of stakeholders in considering the unique factors impacting belonging for blind people. By attending to these perspectives, stakeholders can become more responsive to the experiences of people from equity-deserving groups. Understanding facilitators and barriers to belonging could result in culturally safer practices and inclusive pedagogical practices and system policies. Only when we create a space where everyone can belong will higher education be truly inclusive.

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Published

2023-06-14


Keywords

accessibility, belonging, blind, blindness, disability, inclusion, higher education



Section

Special Issue: The Perspectives of Traditionally Underrepresented Students



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How to Cite

Bulk, L. Y., Jarus, T., & Nimmon, L. (2023). "And BAM. You Have a Connection”: Blind/Partially Blind Students and the Belonging in Academia Model. Canadian Journal of Higher Education/La Revue Canadienne d’enseignement supérieur, 52(4), 67–85. https://doi.org/10.47678/cjhe.v52i4.189727