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Zeitschriftenartikel zum Thema "Disability (attitudes toward)"

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Kirchman, Margaret. „Attitudes Toward Disability“. Physical & Occupational Therapy In Geriatrics 5, Nr. 3 (Januar 1987): 51–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/j148v05n03_06.

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C. Onah, Festus, und Kelechi T. Ugwu. „FACTORS INFLUENCING THE ATTITUDESOF NIGERIANS TOWARD PERSONS WITH PHYSICAL CHALLENGES“. International Journal of Advanced Research 9, Nr. 5 (31.05.2021): 395–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.21474/ijar01/12851.

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The present study aimed to examine the factors influencing the attitudes of Nigerians toward people with a physical disability. The study hypothesized that education and exposure to the physical challenge would influence attitudes toward people with a physical disability. The design of the study was cross-sectional. The participants comprise one hundred (100) workers drawn from state and local government civil service in the Enugu State, Nigeria, using a random sampling technique. Data were collected through a self-administered survey questionnaire, using a modified version of the Scale of Attitudes towards Disabled Persons (SADP). The result revealed that the participants largely showed positive attitudes towards persons with physical challenges. Two hypotheses were tested using multiple regression analysis and the analysis revealed that educational leveldid not influence attitude towards the physically challenged. However, it was found that exposure to a person with physical challenges influenced the attitudes toward people with a physical disability.
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McDonald, Katherine E., Christopher B. Keys und David B. Henry. „Gatekeepers of Science: Attitudes Toward the Research Participation of Adults With Intellectual Disability“. American Journal on Mental Retardation 113, Nr. 6 (01.11.2008): 466–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1352/2008.113:466-478.

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Abstract Researchers and Institutional Review Board (IRB) members' attitudes influence scientific knowledge about individuals with intellectual disability. We recruited 260 intellectual disability researchers and IRB members to develop a measure of attitudes toward the research participation of adults with intellectual disability, the Participation in Research Attitude Scale. Findings suggest three conceptual domains: Opportunity and Choice, Help in Decision Making, and Beneficence. We also examined individual differences in attitudes and the relationships between general and specific attitudes. In general, intellectual disability researchers and those with closer relationships to individuals with disabilities had attitudes consistent with disability-rights principles. Some dimensions of global attitudes toward adults with intellectual disability predicted more specific attitudes toward their research participation. Implications are discussed.
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Alahmari, Khalid A., Kanagaraj Rengaramanujam, Ravi Shankar Reddy, Paul Silvian Samuel, Irshad Ahmad, Venkata Nagaraj Kakaraparthi und Jaya Shanker Tedla. „Effect of Disability-Specific Education on Student Attitudes Toward People With Disabilities“. Health Education & Behavior 48, Nr. 4 (11.03.2021): 532–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1090198121995774.

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Attitude is a multidimensional and complex notion that considerably empowers or limits the major life activities of humans. Health professionals’ attitudes toward people with disabilities are significant factors in the rehabilitation process. Soon after completing their coursework, the final-year students from health science meet the patients and rehabilitate them. This study accordingly aims to assess the attitude toward disability among final-year health science students before and after administering a disability-specific structured teaching program. A total of 243 final-year undergraduate health science students from medical, dental, physical therapy, pharmacy, laboratory sciences, radiology sciences, and nursing aged between 21 and 27 years participated in this study. This work employed the Scale of Attitudes Toward Disabled Persons (SADP) to measure attitudes among participants. The mean pre- and posttest SADP scores were 83.59 ± 15.45 and 107.83 ± 62, respectively ( p < .001). Students from medical, dental, physical therapy, and nursing showed significant positive attitudes toward disability compared with other students, whereas college students in the final year of health science generally had poor attitudes toward disability. The results indicate that the disability-specific structured teaching program is effective in improving the attitude toward disability among final-year health science students. Accordingly, the authors recommend modifying the disability-related content in the health sciences curriculum.
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Tachibana, Toshiaki, und Kanji Watanabe. „Schemata and Attitudes toward Persons with Intellectual Disability in Japan“. Psychological Reports 93, Nr. 3_suppl (Dezember 2003): 1161–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.2466/pr0.2003.93.3f.1161.

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375 parents of pupils were asked to respond to 14 questions on attitudes toward persons with intellectual disability. About 30% of variance in attitude was explained by a set of variables. The effects of schemata concerning person with intellectual disability had a great effect on attitudes toward such persons. The guess of a greater contribution of heredity as the basis of intellectual disability and of fewer such persons in the future of their own families than in the general population was associated with greater negative attitudes toward persons with intellectual disability. As these estimations relate to teachable information, the attitudes might be improved.
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Florian, Victor, Amatzia Wiesel, Shlomo Kravetz und Ester Shurka-Zernitsky. „Cultural influences on attitudes toward disability“. International Journal of Rehabilitation Research 11, Nr. 3 (September 1988): 279–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00004356-198809000-00010.

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Jabin, Norma. „Attitudes toward disability: Horney's theory applied“. American Journal of Psychoanalysis 47, Nr. 2 (Juni 1987): 143–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/bf01253027.

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Tripp, April, Ron French und Claudine Sherrill. „Contact Theory and Attitudes of Children in Physical Education Programs Toward Peers with Disabilities“. Adapted Physical Activity Quarterly 12, Nr. 4 (Oktober 1995): 323–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1123/apaq.12.4.323.

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Contact theory was examined by comparing total and subscale attitude scores of children toward peers with disabilities (physical, learning, behavioral) in integrated (contact) and segregated (noncontact) physical education settings. Subjects were 455 children ages 9 to 12 years; class size was 40 to 45. Data were collected using the Peer Attitudes Toward the Handicapped Scale (PATHS). ANOVA on total attitude scores indicated gender differences, with girls having more positive attitudes, but no difference between settings. MANOVA on subscale attitude scores revealed gender differences, favoring girls, only on the physical disability subscale. Setting significantly affected attitudes toward physical and behavioral disabilities but not learning disabilities. Children in the integrated setting had significantly more positive attitudes toward peers with behavioral disabilities than those in the segregated setting, but the reverse was true toward peers with physical disabilities. Contact theory was supported by this research for only behavioral disability.
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Harper, Dennis C. „Children's Attitudes toward Physical Disability in Nepal“. Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology 28, Nr. 6 (November 1997): 710–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0022022197286004.

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TOWNSEND, M. A. R., K. M. WILTON und T. VAKILIRAD. „Children's attitudes toward peers with intellectual disability“. Journal of Intellectual Disability Research 37, Nr. 4 (28.06.2008): 405–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2788.1993.tb00883.x.

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Dissertationen zum Thema "Disability (attitudes toward)"

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Haskell, Rachael A. „Evaluating Social Work Students’ Attitudes Toward Physical Disability“. Scholar Commons, 2010. https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/1655.

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Given the social work profession's commitment to serving individuals with disabilities and cultural competence, the promotion of favorable attitudes toward persons with disabilities within social work education is critical. This study examined the question: "what are the attitudes of undergraduate social work students at three universities toward individuals with physical disabilities as measured by responses on the Attitudes Toward Disabled Persons Scale Form B (ATDP-Form B; Yuker et al., 1960, 1966) and Interactions with Disabled Persons Scale (Gething, 1991)?" It explored the following hypotheses, that participants who: 1) have had prior positive contact with persons with physical disabilities; 2) have higher perceived levels of knowledge about issues affecting persons with physical disabilities; and 3) have had more social work classes will respond with more positive attitudes than other participants. Sociodemographic data about gender, ethnicity, country of origin, religion, and university affiliation was also collected to measure the possible impact of these characteristics on student attitudes. The primary aim is to learn more about the way undergraduate social work students generally view individuals with physical disabilities and feel about interactions with this population.
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Fields, Danelle. „Psychology Trainee Attitudes Toward People with Disabilities“. University of Akron / OhioLINK, 2013. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=akron1367232111.

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Fort, Megan. „Inclusive Recreation: The Malleability of Attitudes Toward Disability Through Peer Interaction“. BYU ScholarsArchive, 2014. https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/5687.

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This study explored the malleability of attitudes with the goal of improving social inclusion for a stigmatized group, specifically individuals with developmental disabilities. Contact Theory was used as an intentional structure for meaningful intergroup contact to assess, understand, and improve meanings applied to individuals with disabilities at an inclusive summer day camp. Adolescent volunteers were administered quantitative questionnaires utilizing the Contact with Disabled Persons Scale (CDP) and the Multi-Dimensional Attitude Scale (MAS). Collected data were used to determine the efficacy of involvement in an inclusive recreation program on adolescent participants' attitudes toward disability. After a covariate-adjusted regression analysis, contact with individuals with disabilities was found to significantly predict change in attitudes toward disability. Dyadic interviews were held after camp participation to provide additional sources of data with potential for deeper understanding of the camp experience for the volunteers. The data suggested participants perceived camp as a setting for the development of reciprocal relationships with peers who have developmental disabilities. These relationships further framed participants' understanding of the experience as fun, difficult, and resulting in perceived personal change. Implications for future research are discussed.
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Junell, Annette Marie. „Increasing positive attitudes toward people who have a major mental disability“. Scholarly Commons, 1997. https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/uop_etds/2715.

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This study used a posttest only control group design to measure the attitudes of people who experience a major mental disability towards others with a mental illness. Each group watched a video: the experimental group a video on mental illness and the control group a video on anger management. Each group discussed the video and their own experiences. The hypothesis was that knowledge on the part of the participants of the life circumstances of others with a mental disability would increase acceptance of people with a mental disability. The results were not significant at $p=.5$. Differences at a 1-month follow-up were also not significant at $p=.066$.
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Payne, Courtney. „The Impact of Language and Disability Type on Attitudes Toward Persons with Disabilities“. OpenSIUC, 2014. https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/theses/1521.

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This study explored the ways in which the type of language used can influence attitudes about people with disabilities. The extent to which positive, neutral, or negative language about different disabilities influences able-bodied people's attitudes about those with disabilities was tested. This study examined the impact of language on the ways that different types of disabilities are perceived by exposing participants to one of three different language types about the disabled through vignettes. Participants were then asked to rank their preferences for roommates based on the person having one of five different disabilities. Overall attitudes towards the disabled did not differ based on the type of language participants were exposed to, but the Behaviors sub-scale of the Multidimensional Attitudes Toward Disabled Persons Scale (MAS; Findler, Vilchinsky, & Werner, 2007) showed significantly different scores for the negative (M = 19.79) and positive (M = 23.00) language conditions. Preferences for roommates were ranked differently based on the type of disability described in the vignette. The types of disabilities were ranked in the following order, from most to least preferable: (a) health condition (diabetes), (b) learning disability (dyslexia) (c) mental illness (PTSD), (d) deafness, and (e) mobility impairment (cerebral palsy).
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Kegley, John. „Development of a Multidimensional Scale to Measure Attitudes Toward Workers With a Disability“. TopSCHOLAR®, 2004. http://digitalcommons.wku.edu/theses/532.

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Existing measures of attitudes toward individuals with a disability have been shown to suffer from several shortcomings in their application in organizational settings. Indirect measurement has been beyond the scope of most organizations due to the complex and expensive implementation of these methods. Direct measures have been shown to be susceptible to threats to internal validity, such as reactivity and socially desirable responding. Further, existing direct measures have focused on unidimensional aspects of attitudes toward individuals with disabilities. Research, however, has demonstrated that attitudes are multidimensional in nature. There is a need for a multidimensional scale to tap those underlying factors. This study involves the development of a multidimensional, paper and pencil measure of attitudes toward individuals with a disability.
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Desta, Dolisso Daniel. „Attitudes toward disability and the role of community based rehabilitation programs in Ethiopia /“. Joensuu : University of Joensuu, 2000. http://bibpurl.oclc.org/web/31388.

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Ugas, Abigail B. S. „The explicit attitudes of genetic counselors towards individuals with disabilities: A survey“. University of Cincinnati / OhioLINK, 2020. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ucin1592132941323776.

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Hughes, Stephanie. „Exploring Attitudes toward People Who Stutter: A Mixed Model Approach“. Bowling Green, Ohio : Bowling Green State University, 2008. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc%5Fnum=bgsu1213188444.

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Doyle, Andrea. „The Viability of the Implicit Association Test Applied to Attitudes Toward Individuals with Disabilities and Measurement of Coworker Attitudes Toward Individuals with a Disability“. TopSCHOLAR®, 2002. http://digitalcommons.wku.edu/theses/654.

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Attitudes toward individuals with disabilities were examined using two different methods: (a) the Implicit Association Test assessing general implicit attitudes and (b) a vignette study assessing coworker attitudes. The Implicit Association Test was used in an attempt to replicate Tringo's Hierarchy of Preference using five exemplar disabilities: (a) Cancer, (b) Paraplegic, (c) Mental Illness, (d) Alcoholic, and (e) HIV Positive. The results did not support a replication of the Hierarchy of Preference. Three dimensions of disabilities were manipulated for the vignette study. These dimensions were the overtness of the disability, the level of risk associated with the disability, and response of the individual with the disability to their environment. The participants rated the individual in the vignette on perceived competence of the individual, potential tolerance of the individual, and potential befriending of the individual by coworkers. The response dimension and the risk dimension influenced ratings on the dependent variables while the overtness dimension did not. Furthermore, no relationship was found between scores on the five IAT tests and ratings on competence, tolerance, and befriending. Taken together, the results of the current study indicate that further studies are warranted to determine if the IAT is a valid measure of attitudes toward individuals with disabilities.
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Bücher zum Thema "Disability (attitudes toward)"

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Abergel, Louise Jane. The attitudes of students with learning disability toward pull-out withdrawal, in-class resource, and collaborative educational models. Ottawa: National Library of Canada, 1995.

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Grewal, Ini. 'Disabled for life?': Attitudes towards, and experiences of, disability in Britain. London: Department for Work and Pensions, 2002.

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Green, Roy Eric. Relationships and disability: A study of society's attitudes towards the sexual fulfillment of disabled people, and the role of education and training in shaping attitudes. Birmingham: University of Birmingham, 1998.

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Hanly, Robert. Attitudes towards dating peers with visual and hearing impairments-revisited: (in the context of irish cultural stereotypes of disability). (s.l: The Author), 2000.

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Gatrell, Octavia Louise. Sex and sensibility: A study of staff attitudes towards the sexuality of people with learning difficulties inthe Learning Disability Residential Health Service in East Dorset. Poole: Bournemouth University, 1995.

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Changing Social Attitudes Toward Disability: Perspectives from Historical, Cultural, and Educational Studies. Taylor & Francis Group, 2014.

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Bolt, David. Changing Social Attitudes Toward Disability: Perspectives from Historical, Cultural, and Educational Studies. Taylor & Francis Group, 2016.

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Imbornoni, Stephen. ATTITUDES TOWARD PSYCHIATRIC DISABILITY: THE OPINIONS ABOUT MENTAL ILLNESS SCALE IN NURSING EDUCATION EVALUATION. 1996.

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Straus, Joseph N. Representing Disability. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190871208.003.0001.

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In modernist music, disability functions as an artistic resource: a source of images and an impetus for narrative. Disability enables musical modernism. Modernist music is centrally concerned with the representation of disabled bodies. Its most characteristic features—fractured forms, immobilized harmonies, conflicting textural layers, radical simplification of means in some cases, and radical complexity and hermeticism in others—can be understood as musical representations of disability conditions, including deformity/disfigurement, mobility impairment, madness, idiocy, and autism. Although modernist music embodies negative, eugenic-era attitudes toward disability, it also affirmatively claims disability as a resource, thus manifesting its disability aesthetics.
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James, Edward. Disability and Genetic Modification. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252039324.003.0006.

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This chapter examines the theme of disability, including attitudes toward disability and ideas about deviations from the bodily norm, that Bujold explores in her fictional work. While disability is rarely treated in science fiction and fantasy, it is ubiquitous in Bujold's work. Most visible is Miles Vorkosigan himself, whose fetus was damaged by an insurgent's attack and who struggles with his brittle bones and other problems throughout the early decades of his life. But to Miles can be added many other characters whose physical or mental disabilities are a crucial part of the narrative, from the brain-damaged Dubauer in Shards of Honor to the one-handed Dag in the Sharing Knife sequence, and Cazaril, with a mutilated hand and a demonic stomach tumor, in the first Chalion book. Bujold has declared that she was never writing books about issues: they are about character. The disabilities with which her characters have to cope “do not comprise the sums of their characters nor the reasons for their existences, but are just plot-things that happen to them and with which they must deal, daily or otherwise,” and she adds that the letters she gets from disabled readers suggest that they prefer that approach.
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Buchteile zum Thema "Disability (attitudes toward)"

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Dell'Armo, Kristin A., und Marc J. Tassé. „Attitudes, stigma, and ableism toward people with intellectual disability.“ In APA handbook of intellectual and developmental disabilities: Foundations (Vol. 1)., 473–97. Washington: American Psychological Association, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/0000194-018.

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Tan, Boon Siong, Erin Wilson, Robert Campain, Kevin Murfitt und Nick Hagiliassis. „Understanding Negative Attitudes Toward Disability to Foster Social Inclusion: An Australian Case Study“. In Inclusion, Equity and Access for Individuals with Disabilities, 41–65. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-5962-0_3.

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Hassanein, Elsayed Elshabrawy Ahmad. „Teachers’ Attitudes Towards Inclusion“. In Inclusion, Disability and Culture, 47–67. Rotterdam: SensePublishers, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-6209-923-4_3.

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Hassanein, Elsayed Elshabrawy Ahmad. „Egyptian Teachers’ Attitudes Towards Inclusion“. In Inclusion, Disability and Culture, 93–125. Rotterdam: SensePublishers, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-6209-923-4_5.

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Schultz, Izabela Z., Ruth A. Milner, Douglas B. Hanson und Alanna Winter. „Employer Attitudes Towards Accommodations in Mental Health Disability“. In Work Accommodation and Retention in Mental Health, 325–40. New York, NY: Springer New York, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4419-0428-7_17.

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Prendergast, Catherine. „Mental disability and rhetoricity retold“. In Changing Social Attitudes Toward Disability, 60–68. Routledge, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315849126-6.

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Olkin, Rhoda. „Attitudes, Knowledge, and Behavior“. In Teaching Disability, 7–16. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190850661.003.0002.

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This chapter is a review of the relevant literature on effecting changes in attitudes and behaviors toward people with disabilities. It begins with a discussion of the goals of the book and the activities in the book. There is discussion of the relationship between attitudes and behaviors, and whether a change in one is followed by a change in the other. The core research about the bases of attitudes toward disability and attitude change is reviewed. The move in the past few decades from attention to implicit bias to focus on explicit bias is highlighted. The rationale for not using simulation exercises is provided, as well as the social underpinnings of the activities.
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„Why Consider Attitudes Toward Disability?“ In Disability Studies and the Inclusive Classroom, 13–29. Routledge, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203837399-6.

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Caslin, Marie. „Behaviour, emotion, and social attitudes“. In Changing Social Attitudes Toward Disability, 162–71. Routledge, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315849126-16.

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Bolt, David. „Introduction“. In Changing Social Attitudes Toward Disability, 1–11. Routledge, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315849126-1.

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Konferenzberichte zum Thema "Disability (attitudes toward)"

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Rusyidi Binahayati, Binahayati, und Rusyidi Kamrujjama Rusyidi Muhammad. „Attitudes toward homosexuality among Indonesian social work college students“. In International Conference on Diversity and Disability Inclusion in Muslim Societies (ICDDIMS 2017). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/icddims-17.2018.10.

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Morgado, Beatriz, Noelia Melero, Víctor Molina und María Dolores Cortés-Vega. „Inclusive University Classrooms the importance of faculty training“. In HEAd'16 - International Conference on Higher Education Advances. Valencia: Universitat Politècnica València, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/head16.2016.2630.

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The presence of students with disabilities in the universities is increasing. Faculty need to be trained in order to attend these students and with the objective to offer and inclusice education. The aim of this communication is to identify, describe and explain the barriers and aids that students with disabilities experience in university classroom. Forty four students with disabilitis participated in the research. A biographical narrative methodology was used. The university-life histories of the students were complied by making use of in-depth interviews, lifelines and photographs. Results indicate the important of faculty training in matters concerning disabilities and new technologies, informing to the faculty of the presence of students with disabilities in their classroom, the existence of a specific service to support the faculty and the important of iimproving a positive attitude toward the disability. These results are dicussed in line with other studies. Recommendations are maded according to inclusive education and offering keys to universities to provide training plans leading to inclusive education and learning.
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Kavanagh, A., AM Bollier, L. Krnjacki, G. Katsikis, V. Kasidis, J. Ozge und A. Milner. „RF37 Predictors of attitudes towards people with disability in australia: findings from a cross-sectional survey of australian adults“. In Society for Social Medicine and Population Health and International Epidemiology Association European Congress Annual Scientific Meeting 2019, Hosted by the Society for Social Medicine & Population Health and International Epidemiology Association (IEA), School of Public Health, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland, 4–6 September 2019. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/jech-2019-ssmabstracts.152.

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Vlašković, Veljko. „OSVRT NA PRAVA DECE SA INVALIDITETOM SA TEŽIŠTEM NA PRISTUP ZDRAVSTVENIM USLUGAMA“. In XVII majsko savetovanje. Pravni fakultet Univerziteta u Kragujevcu, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.46793/uvp21.569v.

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It is no coincidence that the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities is the first international human rights treaty in the 21st century. The Convention seeks to amend the social and legal status of persons with disabilities, including children, in a revolutionary way. The main goal is to remove social barriers by adopting a social model of disability in recognizing and exercising the human rights of persons with disabilities on an equal basis with other persons. Therefore, it is understandable that the rules of earlier international human rights treaties, such as the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child or the European Convention on Human Rights, are beginning to be directly adjusted to the this Convention. From the aspect of recognition and exercising of the rights of children with disabilities, the issue of accessibility to health care services is especially important. It insists on the application of the principles of reasonable accommodation, accessibility and non-discrimination so that children with disabilities have access to health care facilities on an equal basis with other children. This implies significant involvement of the state, local community and family in order to remove social and infrastructural barriers. Furthermore, the UN Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities calls for an absolute ban on the forced detention and placement of children in health care facilities, while there is a very negative attitude towards the care of children with disabilities in social protection institutions. In this regard, an amendment to the domestic Law on the Protection of Persons with Mental Disabilities is required. According to the social model of disability, the family environment with the appropriate and effective support of the local community is a necessary environment for the realization of the rights of children with disabilities. When it comes to the consent of a child with a disability to a medical treatment, it is necessary to determine the child's capability to form views, as in the case of other children. In that sense, the mentioned child should be provided with appropriate assistance and support to express his / her views. This support consists primarily in the way in which the child is informed about the proposed medical treatment.
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BOUMAZOUZA, Nassima. „CONCEPTUAL DEVELOPMENT OF SPECIAL NEEDS THROUGH THE SYMBOLISM OF ABUSE AND BULLYING TARGETING“. In International Research Congress of Contemporary Studies in Social Sciences (Rimar Congress 2). Rimar Academy, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.47832/rimarcongress2-6.

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The World Health Organization (WHO) states on its website, the one dedicated to the regional office of the Middle East, that there are more than 1000 million disabled people across the globe, which represents approximately 15% of the entire world population i.e. nearly 1 in every 7 people is disabled. It also indicates that the number of the people who suffer from a handicap is on a continuous rise, mainly because of the aging population as well as the exacerbation of chronic illnesses. Moreover, the same organization informs that although this matter is of an extreme seriousness, there is in fact a severe lack of awareness and an unavailability of the necessary scientific information related to this topic. As a matter of fact, there is only a small number of documents that display collections of studies about the policies and responses that the countries have put in place in order to meet the needs of people with disabilities. The data related to disabilities and disabled people points out to an evident lack of concern, on a global scale, when it comes to this particular group that happens to include millions of people all throughout the world. However, and despite the efforts and resources dedicated to accommodate and rehabilitate handicapped people, we still, unfortunately, have a long way to go before we can reach this desired goal. So, does it mean that all these efforts were in vain? In this communication, we will attempt to answer this question through a presentation of the historical evolution of opinions about the meaning of disability and special needs in light of the recent scientific advancements and its impact on the social perception, by shedding the light on the symbolism of the phenomenon of abuse and bullying targeting individuals with special needs. This historical examination shows a clear quantum leap when it comes to the treatment and attitude towards people with special needs, a leap that coincides with the advancement that the scientific research and the pathological classification in the psychology have witnessed in the beginning of the twentieth century. Following these classifications, a number of legal renewals took place, which provided disabled people with several rights that guarantee their protection. Therefore, we can determine that there is indeed a tangible change, albeit the fact that there is definitely and undoubtedly more room for improvement in this regard. Consequently, the denunciations we witness today regarding the abuse and mistreatment of people with disabilities is in fact a product of the collective awareness and the public acknowledgment of the radical shift regarding the conceptual and practical notion of disability. Which in turn, predicts a better and a more prosperous future for a group of people who are in dire need of change.
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