Non-disabled secondary school children's lived experiences of a wheelchair basketball programme delivered in the East of England

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Non-disabled secondary school children's lived experiences of a wheelchair basketball programme delivered in the East of England. / Evans, Adam B.; Bright, J L; Brown, L J.

In: Sport, Education and Society, Vol. 20, No. 6, 2015, p. 741-761.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Evans, AB, Bright, JL & Brown, LJ 2015, 'Non-disabled secondary school children's lived experiences of a wheelchair basketball programme delivered in the East of England', Sport, Education and Society, vol. 20, no. 6, pp. 741-761. https://doi.org/10.1080/13573322.2013.808620

APA

Evans, A. B., Bright, J. L., & Brown, L. J. (2015). Non-disabled secondary school children's lived experiences of a wheelchair basketball programme delivered in the East of England. Sport, Education and Society, 20(6), 741-761. https://doi.org/10.1080/13573322.2013.808620

Vancouver

Evans AB, Bright JL, Brown LJ. Non-disabled secondary school children's lived experiences of a wheelchair basketball programme delivered in the East of England. Sport, Education and Society. 2015;20(6):741-761. https://doi.org/10.1080/13573322.2013.808620

Author

Evans, Adam B. ; Bright, J L ; Brown, L J. / Non-disabled secondary school children's lived experiences of a wheelchair basketball programme delivered in the East of England. In: Sport, Education and Society. 2015 ; Vol. 20, No. 6. pp. 741-761.

Bibtex

@article{1d33017c9a904a328fea68edb06cb63d,
title = "Non-disabled secondary school children's lived experiences of a wheelchair basketball programme delivered in the East of England",
abstract = "Frequently an unquestioned belief is held in British schools in the value of {\textquoteleft}normalized{\textquoteright} ability in physical education (PE). Consequently inclusion of disabled students can be problematic. Negative perceptions of disability are rarely challenged. This study investigated the embodied experiences of 49 non-disabled secondary school pupils during a programme designed to introduce disability sport to non-disabled school children entitled {\textquoteleft}The Wheelchair Sports Project{\textquoteright}. Funded by a County Sports Partnership, Wheelchair Basketball sessions were delivered by trained coaches during PE for a 12-week period. Forty-nine pupils aged between 10 and 12 years took part in the study. Non-participant observations were completed during the programme, and semi-structured group interviews were completed with 24 participants pre- and post-project. Bourdieu's theoretical framework guided data analysis. The impact of the project on pupils' perceptions of physical disability was investigated. Prior to the project, pupils emphasized the {\textquoteleft}otherness{\textquoteright} of disabled bodies and described disability sport as inferior and not {\textquoteleft}real{\textquoteright}. Observations highlighted how pupils experienced physical challenges adapting to wheelchair basketball. Pupils struggled to control wheelchairs and frequently diverged from acceptable behaviour by using their lower limbs to {\textquoteleft}cheat{\textquoteright}. Post-programme group interviews demonstrated that, due to their own embodied experiences, pupils began to question their perceptions of the potential ability of participants with physical impairments. Pupils described high physical demands of wheelchair basketball and began to focus upon similarities between themselves and physically disabled individuals. However, participants made no reference to impairments other than physical disability, emphasizing the specificity of the effects of pupils' embodied experiences on their embodied habitus, which, although difficult to assess over the long term, appeared to have an impact on self-perceptions over the short term.",
keywords = "Bourdieu, Children's perceptions, Disability, Embodied experiences, Inclusion, Physical education, Wheelchair sport",
author = "Evans, {Adam B.} and Bright, {J L} and Brown, {L J}",
year = "2015",
doi = "10.1080/13573322.2013.808620",
language = "English",
volume = "20",
pages = "741--761",
journal = "Sport, Education and Society",
issn = "1357-3322",
publisher = "Routledge",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Non-disabled secondary school children's lived experiences of a wheelchair basketball programme delivered in the East of England

AU - Evans, Adam B.

AU - Bright, J L

AU - Brown, L J

PY - 2015

Y1 - 2015

N2 - Frequently an unquestioned belief is held in British schools in the value of ‘normalized’ ability in physical education (PE). Consequently inclusion of disabled students can be problematic. Negative perceptions of disability are rarely challenged. This study investigated the embodied experiences of 49 non-disabled secondary school pupils during a programme designed to introduce disability sport to non-disabled school children entitled ‘The Wheelchair Sports Project’. Funded by a County Sports Partnership, Wheelchair Basketball sessions were delivered by trained coaches during PE for a 12-week period. Forty-nine pupils aged between 10 and 12 years took part in the study. Non-participant observations were completed during the programme, and semi-structured group interviews were completed with 24 participants pre- and post-project. Bourdieu's theoretical framework guided data analysis. The impact of the project on pupils' perceptions of physical disability was investigated. Prior to the project, pupils emphasized the ‘otherness’ of disabled bodies and described disability sport as inferior and not ‘real’. Observations highlighted how pupils experienced physical challenges adapting to wheelchair basketball. Pupils struggled to control wheelchairs and frequently diverged from acceptable behaviour by using their lower limbs to ‘cheat’. Post-programme group interviews demonstrated that, due to their own embodied experiences, pupils began to question their perceptions of the potential ability of participants with physical impairments. Pupils described high physical demands of wheelchair basketball and began to focus upon similarities between themselves and physically disabled individuals. However, participants made no reference to impairments other than physical disability, emphasizing the specificity of the effects of pupils' embodied experiences on their embodied habitus, which, although difficult to assess over the long term, appeared to have an impact on self-perceptions over the short term.

AB - Frequently an unquestioned belief is held in British schools in the value of ‘normalized’ ability in physical education (PE). Consequently inclusion of disabled students can be problematic. Negative perceptions of disability are rarely challenged. This study investigated the embodied experiences of 49 non-disabled secondary school pupils during a programme designed to introduce disability sport to non-disabled school children entitled ‘The Wheelchair Sports Project’. Funded by a County Sports Partnership, Wheelchair Basketball sessions were delivered by trained coaches during PE for a 12-week period. Forty-nine pupils aged between 10 and 12 years took part in the study. Non-participant observations were completed during the programme, and semi-structured group interviews were completed with 24 participants pre- and post-project. Bourdieu's theoretical framework guided data analysis. The impact of the project on pupils' perceptions of physical disability was investigated. Prior to the project, pupils emphasized the ‘otherness’ of disabled bodies and described disability sport as inferior and not ‘real’. Observations highlighted how pupils experienced physical challenges adapting to wheelchair basketball. Pupils struggled to control wheelchairs and frequently diverged from acceptable behaviour by using their lower limbs to ‘cheat’. Post-programme group interviews demonstrated that, due to their own embodied experiences, pupils began to question their perceptions of the potential ability of participants with physical impairments. Pupils described high physical demands of wheelchair basketball and began to focus upon similarities between themselves and physically disabled individuals. However, participants made no reference to impairments other than physical disability, emphasizing the specificity of the effects of pupils' embodied experiences on their embodied habitus, which, although difficult to assess over the long term, appeared to have an impact on self-perceptions over the short term.

KW - Bourdieu

KW - Children's perceptions

KW - Disability

KW - Embodied experiences

KW - Inclusion

KW - Physical education

KW - Wheelchair sport

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84930931648&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1080/13573322.2013.808620

DO - 10.1080/13573322.2013.808620

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:84930931648

VL - 20

SP - 741

EP - 761

JO - Sport, Education and Society

JF - Sport, Education and Society

SN - 1357-3322

IS - 6

ER -

ID: 143917162