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The Need for Norming Instruments That Measure Inclusion Activities Among People Who Have Intellectual Disability

The Need for Norming Instruments That Measure Inclusion Activities Among People Who Have Intellectual Disability

 

By: Scott Spreat1, Dylan Hicks2

1Woods System of Care

2American University

 

Keywords: Intellectual Disability, Inclusion, Norming

Abstract

 

More attention has been brought towards efforts to better integrate people with Intellectual

Disability (ID) with the rest of society. Part of this integration is understanding the similarities

and differences in the number of interactions that people with Intellectual Disability and the

normative population have in various scenarios. In the absence of normed scales measuring

inclusion, community participation data collected from 2005 people with Intellectual Disability

were compared with data from a variety of samples of members of the general public. Studies

suggest a means by which inclusion data might be interpreted. Preliminary results suggested that

people with Intellectual Disability participated in social community events slightly more than the

general public but slightly less in life support events such as grocery shopping. This study

provides insight into how people with Intellectual Disability interact in different community

settings, but also a greater need for more public data on average interaction data from the general

population as a whole.

 

Link to the article on the Science Innovations Journal website 

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