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About the KIND Lab

KIND stands for Komputing for INclusion and Disability. In the KIND lab, we collaborate on projects that aim to make accessibility mainstream in the software industry as well as in computing education. Although some level of accessibility is required by law, it is a bare minimum that often does not meet the needs of people with disabilities. We want to increase awareness of how important accessibility is, and help spread information on how to more successfully implement it. Additionally, we design software for people with disabilities to support their learning and access to information. An example of our work is an accessible video editor that does not rely on vision.
Regarding the culture of the lab, we work remotely and meet in person when we can. We share virtual space and physical space to accommodate various work preferenes. We do our best to meet deadlines, but we prioritize your well being and mental health.



Recent News


2024


Award Won: the PCI Best Paper award was granted to Beyond HCI: The Need for Accessibility Across the CS Curriculum at the SIGCSE Technical Symposium


Workshop on accessibility: In collaboration with TeachAccess, the workshop focused on integrating accessibility into CS courses


Book Chapter: Wrote a chapter on Data Structures + Accessibility in the book Teaching Accessible Computing, the first book that explains how to teach assessibility in the field of CS

Presentation at SIGSCE Technical Symposium: Undergrad researcher Tyanin Opdahl presented the paper Crafting Disability Fairness Learning in Data Science: A Student-Centric Pedagogical Approach at the conference


2023

LinkedIn Livesteam: Participated in a livestreamed panel discussing how the pandemic has impacted women in computing


Presentation at SIGSCE Technical Symposium: Undergrad researcher Pax Newman presented the paper Towards Machine Learning Fairness Education in a Natural Language Processing Course at the conference


2022

Workshop on accessibility: The online workshop discussed how to successfully teach accessibility in computing


2021

Grant: Recieved a grant from the US National Science Foundation for Helping Computer Science Students Learn How to Build Accessible Computing Technologies


Grant: Recieved a grant from SIGSCE for Teaching Accessibility for Fairness in AI Courses