Basham D. James


 James D. Basham
  • Professor in the Department of Special Education at the University of Kansas

Contact Info

Department Phone:
Joseph R. Pearson Hall
Lawrence
1122 W Campus Rd
Lawrence, KS 66045

Biography

James D. Basham, Ph.D., is a Professor in the Department of Special Education at the University of Kansas. His work is focused on developing future-ready learning environments that are equitable, beneficial, and meaningful for all learners. His research focused on the implementation of UDL, AI, STEM education, learner-centered design, innovation, and technology in human learning. He has several federally and privately funded research and technical assistance projects, including the Center for Innovation, Design, and Digital Learning (CIDDL). He is well-published, has given hundreds of talks, and serves on various national and international boards for journals, companies, and education organizations.

Education

Educational Psychology & Special Education, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2005

Research

Research interests:

  • Universal Design for Learning
  • Instructional Design and Technology
  • STEM Education
  • Innovation

Selected Publications

Basham, J. D., Stahl, W., Ortiz, K., Rice, M., & Smith, S. (2015). Equity matters: Digital & Online Learning for Students with Disabilities. (J. Basham & W. Stahl, Eds.) [Reports].

Smith, S., & Basham, J. D. (2014). Designing online learning opportunities for students with disabilities. [Journal Articles]. Teaching Exceptional Children, 1–11.

Marino, M. T., Becht, K., Vasquez, E. G., Gallup, J. L., Basham, J. D., & Gallegos, B. (2014). Enhancing secondary science content accessibility with video games. [Journal Articles]. Teaching Exceptional Children47, 27–34.

Harvey, D., Greer, D., Basham, J., & Hu, B. (2014). From the student perspective: Experiences of middle and high school students in online learning. [Journal Articles]. American Journal of Distance Education28, 14–26.

Marino, M. T., Gotch, C. M., Vasquez, E., Basham, J. D., & Becht, K. (2014). UDL in the middle school science classroom: Can video games and alternative text heighten engagement and learning for students with learning disabilities? [Journal Articles]. Learning Disabilities Quarterly. Published.

Israel, M., Marino, M. T., Basham, J. D., & Spivak, W. (2013). Fifth graders as app designers: How diverse learns conceptualize education apps. [Journal Articles]. Journal of Research on Technology Education46(1), 53–80.

Basham, J. D., Smith, S. J., Greer, D. L., & Marino, M. T. (2013). The scaled arrival of K-12 online education: Emerging realities and implications for the future of education. [Journal Articles]. Journal of Education193(2), 51–59.

Basham, J. D., & Marino, M. T. (2013). Understanding STEM education and supporting students with universal design for learning. [Journal Articles]. Teaching Exceptional Children45(4), 8–15.

Haydon, T., Hawkins, R., Basham, J., Denune, H., Kimener, L., & McCoy, D. (2012). A comparison of iPads and worksheets on math skills of 9th grade students with emotional disorders. [Journal Articles]. Behavioral Disorders37(4), 232–243.

Carnahan, C., Basham, J. D., Christman, J., & Hollingshead, A. (2012). Overcoming challenges: Going mobile with your own video models. [Journal Articles]. Teaching Exceptional Children45(2), 50–59.

Marino, M. T., Israel, M., Beecher, C. C., & Basham, J. D. (2012). Students’ and teachers’ perceptions of using videogames to enhance science instruction. [Journal Articles]. Journal of Science Education and Technology [10590145]22(5), 667–680. 

Lowrey, K. A., Basham, J. D., Gardner, J. E., & Jones, M. (2011). Computer-mediated collaboration: Using the web to contextualize representational issues in general and special education practice [Book Chapters]. In E. D. McCray, P. A. McHatton, & C. L. Beverly (Eds.), Knowledge, Skills, and Dispositions for Culturally Competent and Intercultural Sensitive Leaders in Education (pp. 202–233). CEC Teacher Education Division.

Basham, J. D., Koehler, C., & Israel, M. (2011). Creating a “STEM for all” environment [Book Chapters]. In C. Johnson (Ed.), Secondary STEM Education Reform (Secondary Education in the Changing World) (pp. 1–25). Palgrave Macmillan.

Basham, J. D., Perry, E., & Meyer, H. (2011). It’s in the Bag: Digital Backpacks for Project-Based Learning [Journal Articles]. Learning and Leading with Technology39(2), 24–27.

Grants & Other Funded Activity

Teen Career Pathway (Phase II). 1660018. National Science Foundation. $750000.00. (3/5/2017 - 2/28/2019). Partnered with The Social Express through the National Science Foundation (SBIR) to develop and study a series of video games that support Science Technology Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) career exposure and planning. The investigation studies usability and efficacy through a unique backend of learning analytic data system.. Federal. Status: Funded. Primary Evaluator/Researcher for the Research and Development Team.