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The Development and Initial Validation of a Short, Self-Report Measure on Social Inclusion for People with Intellectual Disabilities-A Transnational Study.

TLDR
In this paper, the authors developed a self-report tool for use by people with intellectual disabilities regarding the social inclusion they experience in sport and in the community and evaluated the reliability of the short form with a further 228 participants.
Abstract
Sport has been promoted as a means of increasing the social inclusion of persons with intellectual disabilities. Suitable tools for evaluating this claim are not readily available. The aim of this study was to develop a self-report tool for use by people with intellectual disabilities regarding the social inclusion they experience in sport and in the community. A three-phase process was used. In the first phase an item bank of questionnaire items was created and field-tested with 111 participants. Initial factor analysis identified 42 items which were further evaluated in Phase 2 with 941 participants from six European countries. Construct validity was established first through Exploratory and then Confirmatory factor analysis. These analyses identified ten items relating to inclusion in sports and ten to inclusion in local communities. A third phase checked the usability and test-retest reliability of the short form with a further 228 participants. In all, 1280 athletes and non-disabled partners were involved from eight countries. This short social inclusion questionnaire has been shown to be a reliable and valid measure for use transnationally. Further psychometric properties remain to be tested; notably its sensitivity to change resulting from interventions aimed at promoting social inclusion.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Promoting the social inclusion of players with intellectual disabilities: an assessment tool for sport coaches

TL;DR: A self-completed assessment tool was devised that can be used to evaluate the promotion of social inclusion within sport teams and the wider community and opens research opportunities into the relationship between this measure of inclusion and outcomes for both the coaches and for the players.
Journal ArticleDOI

The community inclusion of athletes with intellectual disability: a transnational study of the impact of participating in Special Olympics

TL;DR: People with intellectual disability (ID) are often socially excluded from their local communities and Special Olympics aims to promote inclusion through their participation in sport and more recently in education.
Journal ArticleDOI

‘Life is team play’: social inclusion of people with intellectual disabilities in the context of Special Olympics

TL;DR: In this paper , an empirical study on the meaning of social inclusion for Finnish athletes with intellectual disabilities who participate in the Special Olympics (SO) was conducted. And the results indicated that sport and arguably sport more generally can assist people with ID in moving forward on a path from being excluded toward social inclusion.
Journal ArticleDOI

Assessing changes in the self-reported community inclusion of persons with intellectual disability: contrasts between participants in Special Olympics and non-participants

TL;DR: A transnational study had devised an easy-to-use, instrument to obtain... as mentioned in this paper The crucial of aim of Special Olympics (SO) is the promotion of social inclusion for persons with intellectual disability (ID).
Journal ArticleDOI

Examining the Canadian 24-Hour Movement Guidelines among Adults with Intellectual Disability: A Pilot Study

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors investigate the extent to which adults with intellectual disability (ID) met the 2020 Canadian 24-Hour Movement Guidelines (CMLG) and find that most participants met the MVPA guidelines, few met the sedentary behaviour guidelines, and nearly half met the sleep guidelines.
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Community participation of people with an intellectual disability: a review of empirical findings

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Defining social inclusion of people with intellectual and developmental disabilities: An ecological model of social networks and community participation

TL;DR: An ecological model of social inclusion is proposed that includes individual, interpersonal, organizational, community, and socio-political factors and the potential role of self-advocacy organizations in promoting social inclusion.
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