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Gebhardt, Markus ; Mora-Ruano, J. G. ; Schwab, Susanne

Physical Disability, Stigma, and Physical Activity in Children - A Replica Study

Gebhardt, Markus , Mora-Ruano, J. G. and Schwab, Susanne (2016) Physical Disability, Stigma, and Physical Activity in Children - A Replica Study. Journal of Special Education and Rehabilitation (JSER) 17 (1-2), pp. 101-117.

Date of publication of this fulltext: 18 Sep 2020 06:14
Article
DOI to cite this document: 10.5283/epub.43715


Abstract

Introduction: Stereotypes can be reduced through positive descriptions. A stigma that able-bodied adults have towards children with physical disability can be reduced when the child is portrayed as being active. The study found out that a sporty active child, who uses a wheelchair, is perceived as more competent than the sporty active able-bodied child. Objective: This study is a replica study ...

Introduction: Stereotypes can be reduced through positive descriptions. A stigma that able-bodied adults have towards children with physical disability can be reduced when the child is portrayed as being active. The study found out that a sporty active child, who uses a wheelchair, is perceived as more competent than the sporty active able-bodied child.
Objective: This study is a replica study to support the hypotheses and to examine the stereotypes of able-bodied adults towards children with and without (physical) disabilities.
Methods: This study presents two experimental replica studies using a 2 (physical activity) x 2 (sporty activities). The dependent variables were the perception of competencies and warmth according to Stereotype Content Model (SCM). Study 1 is an online experiment with 355 students of the Open University of Hagen. Study 2 surveys 1176 participants (from Munich and Graz) with a paper-pencil-questionnaire.
Results: The significant interaction effect was not supported by our studies.
The sporty able-bodied child was rated higher in competences than the sporty child, who use a wheelchair. Sporting activity only reduces the stigma towards children with a physical disability slightly.
Conclusion: The stigma towards children with physical disability can be reduced when the child is portrayed as being active, but the effect was not strong enough to chance the original classification by the SCM.



Involved Institutions


Details

Item typeArticle
Journal or Publication TitleJournal of Special Education and Rehabilitation (JSER)
Publisher:Faculty of Philosophy, Institute of Special Education and Rehabilitation, Skopje, Macedonia
Volume:17
Number of Issue or Book Chapter:1-2
Page Range:pp. 101-117
Date2016
InstitutionsHuman Sciences > Institut für Bildungswissenschaft > Lehrstuhl für Lernbehindertenpädagogik einschließlich inklusiver Pädagogik - Prof. Dr. Markus Gebhardt
Identification Number
ValueType
10.19057/jser.2016.6DOI
Keywordsphysical disability, stigma, sport, stereo content model, replica study
Dewey Decimal Classification300 Social sciences > 370 Education
StatusPublished
RefereedYes, this version has been refereed
Created at the University of RegensburgNo
URN of the UB Regensburgurn:nbn:de:bvb:355-epub-437154
Item ID43715

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