Nowicki E A
The University of Western Ontario, London, ON, Canada.
J Intellect Disabil Res. 2006 May;50(Pt 5):335-48. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2788.2005.00781.x.
Past research has shown that children can be biased against peers with disabilities, but the association of attitudes with gender, age and disability preferences, as well as interactions between these variables, are unclear. The objectives of this study were to examine these issues in a cross-sectional, split-plot study to clarify: (1) if elementary school children's attitudes towards peers with disabilities are related to age, gender and type of disability; (2) if interactions between these variables exist; and (3) if convergent validity could be achieved across three theoretically linked dependent variables.
One hundred elementary school children between 4 and 10 years old were assessed for attitudes towards target children with no disability, a physical or an intellectual disability, and a combined intellectual/physical disability. Measures were completed in an interview format.
Attitudes towards a target child with physical disabilities and a target child without disabilities did not differ. There was a significant interaction for age and disability. Attitudes towards target children with intellectual and intellectual/physical disabilities were negatively biased, and were negatively associated with age. Results were consistent across measures except for a main effect of gender in one measure and a gender by age interaction in another.
Children's attitudes appear to be associated with several factors, including age and the presence or absence of disability. Gender differences in attitudes may be because of gender-based response biases rather than disability biases. Because of the multifaceted nature of childhood attitudes, cross-sectional designs with several dependent and independent variables provide an opportunity to examine consistency of results across measures and potential interactions between factors that may not be uncovered when variables are examined in isolation.
以往研究表明,儿童可能会对残疾同伴产生偏见,但态度与性别、年龄和残疾偏好之间的关联,以及这些变量之间的相互作用尚不清楚。本研究的目的是在一项横断面裂区研究中探讨这些问题,以阐明:(1)小学生对残疾同伴的态度是否与年龄、性别和残疾类型有关;(2)这些变量之间是否存在相互作用;(3)在三个理论上相关的因变量上是否能实现收敛效度。
对100名4至10岁的小学生进行评估,了解他们对无残疾、身体残疾、智力残疾以及智力/身体合并残疾的目标儿童的态度。测量以访谈形式完成。
对身体残疾目标儿童和无残疾目标儿童的态度没有差异。年龄和残疾之间存在显著的交互作用。对智力残疾和智力/身体合并残疾目标儿童的态度存在负面偏见,且与年龄呈负相关。除一项测量中的性别主效应和另一项测量中的性别与年龄交互作用外,各项测量结果均一致。
儿童的态度似乎与多个因素有关,包括年龄和是否存在残疾。态度上的性别差异可能是由于基于性别的反应偏差而非残疾偏差。由于儿童态度的多面性,具有多个因变量和自变量的横断面设计提供了一个机会,来检验各测量结果的一致性以及各因素之间可能在单独研究变量时未被发现的潜在相互作用。