Kim Fisher is an Associate Professor and Director of the Special Education Assistive Technology Center in the Department of Special Education. Prior to academia, she was an inclusion specialist, learning behavior specialist, and an assistive technology consultant.
482.001Seminar In Special Education Research
344.004Teaching Secondary Content to Students with Disabilities
598.003Professional Practice In Applied Research
344.001Teaching Secondary Content to Students with Disabilities
344.002Teaching Secondary Content to Students with Disabilities
Dr. Fisher’s teaching interests include preparing general educators to teach all students, Universal Design for Learning, and research methods.
Dr. Fisher studies how technology access, knowledge, skills, and use promote social networks, social capital, and community participation for adolescents and young adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities.
Dr. Fisher uses both quantitative survey methods (e.g., egocentric network analysis, structural equation modeling, linear and logistic regression) including secondary data analysis and qualitative interviews and focus group methods (e.g., rapid qualitative analysis, grounded theory) to do this work.
Most recently, her collaborative work with public health researchers and disabled community members has centered around the social and civic participation of youth and adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities using technology. Her research team has several publications, presentations, and invited talks exploring technology access and use for social inclusion and digital citizenship of young adults with and without intellectual disability.
Her two current projects explore technology access and use of Illinois adults with IDD. The first project is an exploratory sequential design exploring how adults with IDD use technology for social, civic, and political participation (survey) and barriers and facilitators they experience (interviews). The second project, funded by a grant from The Arc of Illinois, explores how members of the Going Home Coalition, a group of disability advocates who work to close state institutions in Illinois, have used technology for advocacy work since the COVID pandemic using focus groups and rapid qualitative analysis.
Dr. Fisher has 17 publications, 3 chapters, 3 technical reports, 6 invited talks, and 48 presentations.
Puckett, K., & Fisher, K. W. (2018). Assistive Technology. In E. B. Braaten (Ed.), The SAGE Encyclopedia of Intellectual and Developmental Disorders. SAGE Publishing. https://doi.org/10.4135/9781483392271.n39
Thoma, C., Fisher, K. W., Hall, S. & Scott, L. (2017). High quality educational programs for students with intellectual disability in middle and junior high school. In M. Wehmeyer & K. A. Shogren (Eds.). Research-based Practices for Educating students with Intellectual Disability. New York, New York: Routledge/Taylor & Francis.
Fisher, K. W., Williamson, H. J., Guerra, N., & Kupferman, S. (2021). Digital citizenship: Technology access and use for youth with and without intellectual and/or developmental disabilities. Inclusion, 9(4), 263-175. https://doi.org/10.1352/2326-6988-9.4.263
Fisher, K. W., Williamson, H. J., & Guerra, N. (2020). Technology and social inclusion: Technology training and usage by youth with IDD in the National Longitudinal Transition Study of 2012. Inclusion, 8(1), 43-57. https://doi.org/10.1352/2326-6988-8.1.43
Hart Barnett, J. E., Fisher, K., O’Connell, N., & Franco, K. (2019). Promoting upstander behavior to address bullying in schools. Middle School Journal, 50(1), 6-11. https://doi.org/10.1080/00940771.2018.1550377
Williamson, H., Fisher, K. W., Madvhani, D., & Talarico, L. (2019). #ADA25 campaign: Using social media to promote participation, social inclusion, and civic engagement of individuals with intellectual and developmental disability. Inclusion, 7(1), 24-40. https://doi.org/10.1352/2326-6988-7.1.24
Fisher, K.W., Barnett, J. E., Zucker, S. H., O’Connell, N., & Franco, K. (2018, Summer). Teacher’s Corner: Promoting upstander behavior to address bullying in schools. DADD Express, 29(2), 1, 8. http://www.daddcec.com/uploads/2/5/2/0/2520220/dadd_18_summer_final_040918.pdf
McFadden. E. S., Fisher, K. W., Lee, S., & Kovacs, M., & Barajas, M. (2016). Arizona Comprehensive Review and Analysis. Report prepared for the Arizona Developmental Disabilities Planning Council. Retrieved from https://addpc.az.gov/sites/default/files/media/Comprehensive%20review%20and%20analysis_2016%202nd%20Edition_0.pdf
McFadden, E. S., Daughtery, D. B., Lee, S. E., Fisher, K. W., Hack, A. (2015). The Graduation Cliff: Improving the Post-High School Outcomes of Students with Disabilities. Report prepared for the Arizona Developmental Disabilities Planning Council. Retrieved from https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED574407
Fisher, K. W., Williamson, H., Kupferman, S. (2021, June). Minoritized Youth and the Digital Divide: Exploring Digital Access, Use, and Participation. Poster Symposia at the Annual Meeting of the American Association on Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities, online. https://www.aaidd.org/education/annual-conference/preliminary-program/concurrent-d-sessions