A Qualitative Investigation into the Experiences of Students with Developmental Coordination Disorder (DCD/Dyspraxia) in Higher Education
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Research Design
2.2. Participants
Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria for the Focus Group
2.3. Materials
2.4. Data Collection
2.5. Reliability of the Analysis
Reflexivity
2.6. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Awareness of DCD
3.1.1. Lack of Understanding (Individual and Institutional)
“I’ve had a number of lecturers that are kind of not very understanding of that [DCD] at all.”(Participant 9, RHUL)
“I did have one difficulty with the teacher ’cause it was a one-to-one thing where she very clearly either didn’t know or didn’t think it was a thing [’cause I’ve come across that a few times before]… She set me an assignment, but didn’t give me very precise instructions, so I completely misinterpreted what she wanted, and it was a car crash. I did end up then changing module, so I wasn’t working with her anymore. But yeah, I it definitely felt like she hadn’t been briefed beforehand.”(Participant 1, UoS)
“And then she tried to explain to me the concept of heat. And I was like, I understand that fire cooks food. Yes, that’s not the problem, the problem is having multiple timings.”(Participant 8, RHUL)
3.1.2. Complexity/Heterogeneity
“I actually think that that is interesting that I’ve actually developed some of my more detailed motor skills. I’ve actually developed better as being a vet because I have to practice these things regularly, like over and over and over again.”(Participant 5, UoS)
“I actually have almost the exact opposite problem to participant 5 and my gross motor skills are absolutely fine, but my fine motor skills are absolutely atrocious and calculating has always been a bit of a nightmare for me.”(Participant 6, UoS)
3.1.3. Diagnosis: Acceptance/Disclosure
“… but I also appreciate that me bringing up my dyspraxia hasn’t meant that I’ve been railroaded into taking every single thing that the University has to offer that I could kind of at my own discretion choose what to pick up, what to use, and who to disclose it to that it hasn’t.”(Participant 4, UoS)
“I got diagnosed in my first year and I wouldn’t have got diagnosed if I had not been at University.”(Participant 5, UoS)
“I have had a fairly positive experience at university. I received a diagnosis in my first university year but I wouldn’t have got a diagnosis otherwise. Following that I got support such as extra time in exams. […] I would like to say the DSA grant I got through student finance… was really helpful for me when I first got it… and yeah, beyond to like claim back for like printing expenses, having my own printer. And all the rest of it just took the stress level, not way down, but maybe took it down a notch that I didn’t have to worry about printing and the fact that you know organization was sometimes a problem. It meant that I did fill the DSA. I was really getting really good support.”(Participant 1, UoS)
3.2. Participation in Higher Education for Students with DCD
3.2.1. Specifying Correct Support
“Yeah, I was gonna say probably very similar experience. I was also diagnosed at university but in my second year having had extra time and things and just being told I was probably dyslexic all through secondary schools but never quite fit the mould, so to speak of the dyslexic profile.”(Participant 2, UoS)
“Where they have very generic support packages, it’s kind of tailoring that with the student I suppose and making sure that that’s what they need rather than just this is what we do for everyone with a specific learning difficulties or whatever.”(Participant 9, RHUL)
“The support is very “dyslexia focused” which isn’t always relevant for my diagnosis. I get overwhelmed audibly and visually in lecture halls and explaining that to lecturers is hard because I am not always aware what I need.”(Participant 2, UoS)
“I think for me it’s just not knowing what I want.”(Participant 3, UoS)
“I think it is sometimes assumed that you know exactly what you need. And I think that sometimes tricky as well.”(Participant 9, RHUL)
“But when I got to high scores [this highlighted] the disconnect between what I was able to do verbally and on tests, and what I was able to do written. And that’s why I think the only thing they could think of at the time was extra time to give yourself that chance to slow down and make your writing vaguely legible. In terms of writing medical notes now my trust going over to electronics was an absolute godsend.”(Participant 6, UoS)
“The extra time that I would have in exams during my undergraduate was really essential because for me, just having the freedom of that security to know that I could take my time to formulate my ideas and actually put them down to paper was essential.”(Participant 4, UoS)
3.2.2. Additional Demands of Academia for Students with DCD
“I’d get anxious when I was taking notes because I would be taking the notes and then I’d miss bits where I have been concentrating on what I’m writing.”(Participant 9, RHUL)
“… I could find myself on placement with a [NHS; National Health System] trust (a unit within the National Health Services of England and Wales) that is 100% handwritten documentation… I was so worried beforehand that if I had had access to support beforehand, I think it would have just alleviated a lot of my worrying about it.”(Participant 2, UoS, nursing student)
“well for me I do electronic engineering so I have to do a lot of hands-on soldering and stuff, and there was nothing extra for that, so we would have labs for the first two years of my study, and it’s just a one day a week—it’s like 3 h and then at the lab closes so you can’t do anything extra in the lunch gap. You can’t go in and out of those times, so there’s no extra time to like catch up ’cause I would be a lot slower than a lot of my peers and I would get marked down sometimes, but there was nothing they could do about it. That’s one thing I would say in some courses, maybe the support’s not there.”(Participant 3, UoS, engineering student)
“But I do find that fine motor skills I have had quite a lot of practice on and I feel like it’s developed better, maybe because I’ve had to focus on it and had to practice and had to get better.”(Participant 5, UoS, veterinary student)
“I find in like big lectures an there’s lots of background noise. I get really overwhelmed, and then I can’t like concentrate and I can’t hear, and I can’t focus because there’s so much going on and I can hear everything and like I just get a bit overwhelmed by all of that stimulation.”(Participant 2, UoS)
“what I found myself to struggle with most going to uni is a lot of or some other lectures and seminars have this like participation mark. Which means you have to sort of like talk. And I really struggle with like form my ideas in my head out in full. So, when I speak out, sometimes it just sounds like gibberish.”(Participant 10, RHUL)
“I actually found the independence of university much better for me”… “I think that was the right balance of like independence and structure for me… having the freedom to like do at my own pace and kind of go a bit off script if I need too.”(Participant 8, RHUL)
“I agree that overall university was definitely quite positive experience from my point of view.”(Participant 1, UoS)
3.2.3. Strategies for Academic Success
“There is the typing side, but there’s also the lack of ambiguity that you can put down in black and white in good text to speech. You actually do your work a lot quicker by using the technology properly. I think that’s what I noticed again coming at university second time with how much more focus on my electronic submission and almost minimizing the actual handwriting that you had to do.”(Participant 6, UoS)
“I think one of the coping strategies I used to try and head off the fact that my writing is practically illegible and that was to really use speech detecting software.”(Participant 6, UoS)
“Getting someone else to proofread your work if you can. Uh, because often even if I got loads of mistakes, I don’t spot them because my brain doesn’t really work like that.”(Participant 10, RHUL)
“So you can make these lists and forget about them for the whole day and then but [I use] multiple alerts as well because one might go off and then sort of well, that’s fine, I’ll do that.”(Participant 10, RHUL)
“And they’ve always been very good at kind of encouraging my work patterns. And if between supervisor meetings, it’s a case of not necessary, demanding that I have a written complete draft. More that I have an outline or something a bit with that sort of, that freedom of things it and that has been encouraging, and as far as other forms of support.”(Participant 4, UoS)
“They’ve [Disability and Neurodiversity Services] heard [about] it [DCD] giving examples and things like that, but I don’t think it’s made a vast amount of difference because again, quite a lot of it is you having to ask for what you need, and if you don’t know what you need, it’s very difficult to say.”(Participant 5, UoS)
“Having a printer in my own room rather than having to go into campus to print everything off was really really good. So, it meant that it just gave me like the extra like 15–10 min I needed for handing an essay and also mix it with one less thing I had to do ’cause I would have it when I went in to hand it in rather than having to print off and then hand it in.”(Participant 1, UoS)
“I didn’t know whether this was done on all courses, but for my course in the first two years they actually printed all the notes off for us. And they give them to you in like booklets. And I would say I would have been screwed without them like ’cause I would have had the problem of panicking in the lecture. Can’t keep up, but we had most of the notes already. And I don’t know if all other courses did that, but I think they should ’cause I think it’s a really good thing.”(Participant 3, UoS)
3.3. Everyday Living at University
3.3.1. Organisation/Time Management
“Remembering that I had to get there for the time rather than leave at the time. But yeah, a big thing for me.”(Participant 4, UoS)
“I only know from my experience, but I missed a lot of lectures and stuff like I was all over the place, but a lot of the lecturers didn’t like recording the lectures, but now obviously it’s all online and I think the online format has massively benefited my studies.”(Participant 3, UoS)
“I got into baking, but all the things I’ve baked, they’re very simple recipes and with baking I feel like it’s more as long as you get your work bench setup and you’ve got all your little ingredients and you’ve got your scales, you got all the things you need.”(Participant 8, RHUL)
“I’d then do things like laundry/cleaning/food shop on Sat night when it’s quiet so no-one else is there—not sure if that’s a coping strategy or antisocial-ness.”(Participant 8, RHUL)
[Talking about cooking] “I have a timer on my phone and I’m very precise. Like, I know this comes out this time and yeah, that’s OK for me”.(Participant 7, RHUL)
“Cooking. I think that’s the only thing I really struggle with because it just takes me longer to, like, chop vegetables or something. And so, when I get home late at night, I just don’t wanna cook because it’s gonna take me like, an hour or something”. “And I don’t want to do that after a full day of lectures.”(Participant 7, RHUL)
“I can cook, it just takes me ages, and also I have trouble with the timings of like when to put things in, when to take them out…”(Participant 9, RHUL)
“Laundry was like a no go for me… I think I have so many clothes. Like, really cheap clothes. Just because I didn’t like going to the laundromat and doing it, something that people don’t really understand. I think people underestimate life skills, especially after you’ve had a full day at work, and you get in and you’re just not going to be in the mood to cook or do laundry or anything.”(Participant 8, RHUL)
“But the thing I have the most trouble with is the cleaning aspect. Because there is mess everywhere because you use everything, and I don’t clean up in the way that is too stressful.”(Participant 10, RHUL)
3.3.2. Navigation
“They always like spread the classes out into random different buildings… ’cause you have to find a new room and then next week you’re in another room and it’s just it’s a little bit irritating.”(Participant 7, RHUL)
“For someone who has anxiety anyway, so that’s part of my own issue. But when you’re then stressed ‘cause you can’t find somewhere and then you’re anxious enough about going to lecture, it is just kind of, I… didn’t realize how much of an impact it had had until you asked that question.”(Participant 2, UoS)
“So… if I was asked, now find your way to this part of the university that you’ve never gone to…, I probably would go OK, I will have to take a day or so to just make sure that my I know what my route is, … and so it feels like I need to be very targeted with where I go to find my way”… “And that means that I that’s probably been my coping mechanism that… I do a good job of highlighting which parts of the university are the most important ones, and if for whatever reason there’s an event or circumstance that’s taking you away from your usual area of interest, that’s where I think sometimes the issues can arise.”(Participant 4, UoS)
“I’m generally OK with navigation, but I’d say with the maps and things, I like to familiarize myself with where I’m going beforehand… I find Google Maps very accessible, whereas later trying to load the university maps…”(Participant 9, RHUL)
“the [campus] tour already helps...there are so many different events on campus, and they put them in like all the different buildings I think to make you go to all the different buildings and get experience of them and that really helped.”(Participant 8, RHUL)
3.4. Wellbeing
3.4.1. Anxiety
“So, like my first placement, wasn’t until right at the end of first year and I spent all of first year really, really worried about so many different elements and they seemed really silly things to be worried about. So, for me my handwriting is appalling. And I knew I was going to be expected to be writing a medical note, but other health care professionals to read. And I was like I can’t even read my own handwriting, and I spent like months like worrying and trying to practice my handwriting beforehand.”(Participant 2, UoS)
“I think that I and a lot of people have dealt with mental health issues of anxiety and things like that… so it’s sort of all part of how your head makes sense of things, and I think that when I’ve discussed this with the counselling services, they have always made me aware of what methods and avenues of support there are…”.(Participant 4, UoS)
3.4.2. Physical Tiredness
“I feel tired of all the time, and I don’t know if it’s dyspraxia or not, but yeah, I’d say tiredness and also possibly slightly more stressed than our peers at times.”(Participant 9, RHUL)
“I definitely feel tired, but I think for me, it’s mostly mornings like I’m not a morning person anyway, but I think it’s the concept that you have so much to do, just to even leave the house”… “I feel quite tired and stressed in the mornings, definitely.”(Participant 8, RHUL)
4. Discussion
4.1. Higher Education Institutions and Their Students Do Not Understand DCD
4.2. Secondary Implications of DCD Negatively Affect Academic Success
4.3. Support Available for Students with DCD in Higher Education
4.4. Limitations
4.5. Future Work
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Demographic Information for Focus Groups | ||
---|---|---|
Gender | Man | 4 |
Woman | 6 | |
Total | 10 | |
Age (years) | Range | 21–38 |
Mean | 25.8 | |
SD | 3.9 | |
Education | * HE Qualification (obtained) | 7 |
* HE Qualification (studying) | 3 | |
DCD Assessment | * M-ABC-2 (Mean percentile) | 2.9 (0.1–9) |
* ADC Section 1 | 25 (24–26) | |
* ADC total | 85.3 (68–97) |
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Gentle, J.; Ivanova, M.; Martel, M.; Glover, S.; Hosein, A. A Qualitative Investigation into the Experiences of Students with Developmental Coordination Disorder (DCD/Dyspraxia) in Higher Education. Eur. J. Investig. Health Psychol. Educ. 2024, 14, 3099-3122. https://doi.org/10.3390/ejihpe14120203
Gentle J, Ivanova M, Martel M, Glover S, Hosein A. A Qualitative Investigation into the Experiences of Students with Developmental Coordination Disorder (DCD/Dyspraxia) in Higher Education. European Journal of Investigation in Health, Psychology and Education. 2024; 14(12):3099-3122. https://doi.org/10.3390/ejihpe14120203
Chicago/Turabian StyleGentle, Judith, Mirela Ivanova, Marie Martel, Scott Glover, and Anesa Hosein. 2024. "A Qualitative Investigation into the Experiences of Students with Developmental Coordination Disorder (DCD/Dyspraxia) in Higher Education" European Journal of Investigation in Health, Psychology and Education 14, no. 12: 3099-3122. https://doi.org/10.3390/ejihpe14120203
APA StyleGentle, J., Ivanova, M., Martel, M., Glover, S., & Hosein, A. (2024). A Qualitative Investigation into the Experiences of Students with Developmental Coordination Disorder (DCD/Dyspraxia) in Higher Education. European Journal of Investigation in Health, Psychology and Education, 14(12), 3099-3122. https://doi.org/10.3390/ejihpe14120203