Abstract
This article explores the constraints to mainstream sports participation of children with disability in community sports clubs and schools through their lived experiences and the perceptions of parents, teachers, coaches, and club officials. It does so by administering an open-ended survey instrument to a sample of participants recruited from schools, sporting facilities, and disability organizations in New South Wales and Victoria, Australia. The data were analysed through a transdisciplinary conceptual framework which brought together the social model of disability (disability studies) with the leisure constraints framework (leisure studies), which have been encouraged by both academics and practitioners. The findings identified ableist and disablist practices, creating an enabled understanding of the facilitators for social inclusion. Participants perceived that interrelated intrapersonal, interpersonal, and structural constraints excluded children from their desired sporting activities. Through applying the social model of disability to the leisure constraints framework, the findings and discussion showed that a great deal of what had been considered intrapersonal constraints of the child with disability could be reinterpreted as interpersonal and structural constraints through enabling socially inclusive practices. The implications are that a social model of disability brings a new social lens to understanding constraints to sport participation for children with disability and can produce effective strategies for inclusion in sport at schools and community sport clubs.
Highlights
Participation in physical activity can be beneficial on a variety of levels (Son, Kerstetter, & Mowen, 2008)
While the Australian ethos and national identity emphasizes the importance of participation in sport for all and a ‘level playing field,’ many groups including children with disability (CwD) are marginalized from sport participation (Veal, Darcy, & Lynch, 2013)
This article has provided an exploratory attempt at examining perceptions of constraints facing CwD in community and school sport
Summary
Participation in physical activity can be beneficial on a variety of levels (Son, Kerstetter, & Mowen, 2008). Research on megatrends in sport shows that increasingly, governments, businesses, and communities are recognizing the broader benefits of sport (Hajkowicz, Cook, Wilhelmseder, & Boughen, 2013). Such benefits include improvements to mental and physical health, Social Inclusion, 2020, Volume 8, Issue 3, Pages 209–223 crime prevention, social development, leadership, social capital, and achieving international cooperation objectives (Darcy, Maxwell, Edwards, Onyx, & Sherker, 2014). Australia’s 2030 strategy has again identified the marginalized position of PwD as a serious social policy situation requiring new approaches to change the low sport participation by PwD (Sport Australia, 2019). While the Australian ethos and national identity emphasizes the importance of participation in sport for all and a ‘level playing field,’ many groups including children with disability (CwD) are marginalized from sport participation (Veal, Darcy, & Lynch, 2013)
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