Parent and child perceptions of the positive effects that a child with a disability has on the family

Historically, children with disabilities have been perceived as sources of stress, and disability has been portrayed in Western society as a tragedy to be avoided. This study used Appreciative Inquiry methodology and an integrated conceptual framework combining the Dynamic Ecological Systems Model,...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lodewyks, Michelle R
Other Authors: Blais, Christine (Disability Studies)
Language:en_US
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/3143
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-MWU.1993-31432014-03-29T03:42:26Z Parent and child perceptions of the positive effects that a child with a disability has on the family Lodewyks, Michelle R Blais, Christine (Disability Studies) Hansen, Nancy (Disability Studies) Etcheverry, Emily (School of Medical Rehabilitation) Woodgate, Roberta (Nursing) positive effects disability family perceptions parent child Historically, children with disabilities have been perceived as sources of stress, and disability has been portrayed in Western society as a tragedy to be avoided. This study used Appreciative Inquiry methodology and an integrated conceptual framework combining the Dynamic Ecological Systems Model, Cognitive Adaptation Theory, and components of the Affirmative Model of Disability. Qualitative interviews were conducted with ten children and sixteen parents to gain insight into their perceptions of the positive effects that a child with a disability has on the family. Findings suggest that children with disabilities can have some of the same positive effects on, and make some of the same contributions to, their families as any other child. They can also have unique positive effects and make unique contributions potentially unparalleled by their non-disabled peers. These findings may have implications for how disability is perceived by medical professionals, parents raising children with disabilities, and the public. 2009-04-13T16:39:05Z 2009-04-13T16:39:05Z 2009-04-13T16:39:05Z http://hdl.handle.net/1993/3143 en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic positive
effects
disability
family
perceptions
parent
child
spellingShingle positive
effects
disability
family
perceptions
parent
child
Lodewyks, Michelle R
Parent and child perceptions of the positive effects that a child with a disability has on the family
description Historically, children with disabilities have been perceived as sources of stress, and disability has been portrayed in Western society as a tragedy to be avoided. This study used Appreciative Inquiry methodology and an integrated conceptual framework combining the Dynamic Ecological Systems Model, Cognitive Adaptation Theory, and components of the Affirmative Model of Disability. Qualitative interviews were conducted with ten children and sixteen parents to gain insight into their perceptions of the positive effects that a child with a disability has on the family. Findings suggest that children with disabilities can have some of the same positive effects on, and make some of the same contributions to, their families as any other child. They can also have unique positive effects and make unique contributions potentially unparalleled by their non-disabled peers. These findings may have implications for how disability is perceived by medical professionals, parents raising children with disabilities, and the public.
author2 Blais, Christine (Disability Studies)
author_facet Blais, Christine (Disability Studies)
Lodewyks, Michelle R
author Lodewyks, Michelle R
author_sort Lodewyks, Michelle R
title Parent and child perceptions of the positive effects that a child with a disability has on the family
title_short Parent and child perceptions of the positive effects that a child with a disability has on the family
title_full Parent and child perceptions of the positive effects that a child with a disability has on the family
title_fullStr Parent and child perceptions of the positive effects that a child with a disability has on the family
title_full_unstemmed Parent and child perceptions of the positive effects that a child with a disability has on the family
title_sort parent and child perceptions of the positive effects that a child with a disability has on the family
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/3143
work_keys_str_mv AT lodewyksmicheller parentandchildperceptionsofthepositiveeffectsthatachildwithadisabilityhasonthefamily
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