Inclusion of Children with Disabilities in Free Risky Play: Difference between revisions

Jump to:navigation,search
(updated content for plus rotation)
(Undo revision 337069 byAminat Abolade(talk))
Tag:Undo
Line 3: Line 3:
'''Top Contributors''' - {{Special:Contributors/{{Inclusion of Children with Disabilities in Free Risky Play}}}}
'''Top Contributors''' - {{Special:Contributors/{{Inclusion of Children with Disabilities in Free Risky Play}}}}


A child’s right to play is enshrined by article 31 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child.Not alwaysthis right is met appropriately by institutions, governments and policymakers. Route A. Joining the big adventure • SEN Magazine [Internet]. SEN Magazine. 2012 [cited 2022 Jun 21]. Available from: https://senmagazine.co.uk/content/activities/outdoors/1073/joining-the-big-adventure-making-outdoor-play-accessible-to-all/ Play also includes physical activity, which is crucial for children tomaintainingtheir healthy social, physical and psychological development. About 80% of the children around the globe do not meet the recommendations of the WHO for 60 minutes of moderate to vigorous physical activity per day. Aubert S, Barnes JD, Abdeta C, NaderPA, Adeniyi AF, Aguilar-Farias N,et al. Global Matrix 3.0 Physical Activity Report Card Grades for Children and Youth: Results and Analysis From 49 Countries.JPhys Act Health [Internet]2018 Jan 2[cited 2022 Jun 9];15(s2):S251–73. Available from:https://journals.humankinetics.com/view/journals/jpah/15/s2/article-pS251.xml But it is not just the intensity that is relevant for health benefitsof physical activity for health, especially in children with disabilities. The importance of global psychosocial experiences such as satisfaction, enjoyment and perceptions of inclusion have been highlighted as well. Ross SM, Bogart KR, Logan SW, Case L, Fine J, Thompson H. PhysicalActivity ParticipationofDisabled Children: ASystematic ReviewofConceptualandMethodological ApproachesinHealth ResearchFront Public Health [Internet].2016 Sep 5[cited 2022 Jun 26];4:187.可用from: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5011128/ Ross et al.(2016)define participation of children with disabilities in physical activity as follows:
A child’s right to play is enshrined by article 31 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child.However,this right isnot alwaysmet appropriately by institutions, governments and policymakers.Route A. Joining the big adventure • SEN Magazine [Internet]. SEN Magazine. 2012 [cited 2022 Jun 21]. Available from: https://senmagazine.co.uk/content/activities/outdoors/1073/joining-the-big-adventure-making-outdoor-play-accessible-to-all/ Play also includes physical activity, which is crucial for children tomaintaintheir healthy social, physical and psychological development. About 80% of the children around the globe do not meet the recommendations of the WHO for 60 minutes of moderate to vigorous physical activity per day.Aubert S, Barnes JD, Abdeta C,AbiNaderP, Adeniyi AF, Aguilar-Farias N,Tenesaca DS, Bhawra J, Brazo-SayaveraJ, Cardon G, Chang CK.[https://journals.humankinetics.com/view/journals/jpah/15/s2/article-pS251.xmlGlobal matrix 3.0 physical activity report card grades for children and youth: results and analysis from 49 countries]. Journal of physical activity and health. 2018 Jan 2;15(s2):S251-73. But it is not just the intensity that is relevant for health benefits, especially in children with disabilities. The importance of global psychosocial experiences such as satisfaction, enjoyment and perceptions of inclusion have been highlighted as well.Ross SM, Bogart KR, Logan SW, Case L, Fine J, Thompson H.[https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpubh.2016.00187/fullPhysicalactivity participationofdisabled children: Asystematic reviewofconceptualandmethodological approachesin健康研究)Frontiers in public health.2016 Sep 5;4:187. Ross et al.define participation of children with disabilities in physical activity as follows:


“Physicalactivity participation describes “experiences in physically demanding movement, sport, game, or recreational play that results in energy expenditure and perceptions of communal involvement.
'Physicalactivity participation describes “experiences in physically demanding movement, sport, game, or recreational play that results in energy expenditure and perceptions of communal involvement."'


Physicalactivityparticipation ofchildren with disabilities can be qualified by:
The participation in physicalactivitybychildren with disabilities can be qualified by:


# Level: the frequency of attendance and intensity of physical exertion
# Level: the frequency of attendance and intensity of physical exertion
# Quality of experience: self-perceived feelings of social inclusion, enjoyment, self-efficacy, and satisfaction
# Quality of experience: self-perceived feelings of social inclusion, enjoyment, self-efficacy, and satisfaction
# Overall profile: the extent to which a child’s level of participation matches their expectation for a quality experience.
# Overall profile: the extent to which a child’s level of participation matches their expectation for a quality experience




参与体育活动的定义ty for children with disabilities extends beyond mere health and physical outcomes. It encompasses a broader health experience that takes into account the dynamic interaction between the child and their environment, while also considering the quality of the experience. Underestimating the abilities of children with disabilities in engaging in physical activity and play can lead to diminished expectations, limited opportunities, and reduced engagement in health-promoting behaviors. Encouraging children with disabilities to participate in moderate to high intensity physical activity during their childhood can help reduce their predisposition to develop secondary health conditions, such as non-communicable diseases. Engaging in enjoyable physical activities fosters childhood experiences that support psychosocial development, including the development of interpersonal skills, self-confidence, and self-efficacy. Increasing children's participation in physical activity is viewed as a primary goal by both parents and professionals working with children with disabilities. Especially for a child with disabilities, the definition of participation in physical activity cannot be restricted to health and physical outcomes. Physical activity of children with disabilities is rather a broader health experience, situated within a dynamic child-environment interaction, which acknowledges the aspects of the quality of the experience. Underestimating the abilities of a child with disabilities in taking part in physical activity and play can result in lower expectations and fewer opportunities, and reduce their engagement in health-promoting behaviours. When children with disabilities engage in moderate to high intensity physical activity during their childhood, it can reduce their predisposed risk for the development of secondary health conditions such as non-communicable diseases. Enjoyable physical activities will foster childhood experiences that nourish the psychosocial development of children’s interpersonal skills, their self-confidence and self-efficacy. To increase their children’s participation in physical activity has been described as a primary goal of both parents and professionals in childhood disability'''.'''


总的来说,孩子们努力执行的nd exciting play activities that involve some kind of risk such as climbing or jumping at great heights, swinging, playing or engaging in rough and tumble play. Free risky play offers opportunities to master age-adequate challenges, manage fears and to learn life skills. Reasonable risk taking in play is a fundamental factor in emotional development, and the development of gross motor and cognitive functions Sandseter EB, Kennair LE. Children's risky play from an evolutionary perspective: [https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/147470491100900212 The anti-phobic effects of thrilling experiences. Evolutionary psychology.] 2011 Apr 1;9(2):147470491100900212.. Children’s opportunities to engage in free outdoor risky play is limited by social and environmental factors, and adult’s concerns, which compromises their overall health and wellbeing. To engage in free and risky play is even more crucial for children with disabilities than for their peers without disabilities. A lack of accessible playgrounds or overprotective attitude of caregivers are major barriers, preventing them from fully benefiting from this kind of play experience Caprino F. [https://www.researchgate.net/publication/338067931_When_the_risk_is_worth_it_the_inclusion_of_children_with_disabilities_in_free_risky_play When the risk is worth it: the inclusion of children with disabilities in free risky play]. 2018 Feb 20;40–7.. The social exclusion of individuals with impairments has been perpetuated through the application of a medical model of disability, which primarily focuses on locating disability within individuals and their physical conditions. Within this model, health interventions such as physiotherapy have historically aimed to eliminate or improve individual characteristics related to the impairment. However, this approach overlooks the significant impact of environmental and social factors that contribute to disability. By disregarding the disabling influences of the environment and society, the consideration of these crucial factors is minimized. Social exclusion of people with impairments has been supported by applying a medical model of disability, which located disability within individuals and their bodies. Based on this model, health interventions, including physiotherapy, aimed (and sometimes still aim) to eliminate or ameliorate individual characteristics of children’s impairment. This kind of thinking minimizes any consideration of disabling environmental and social influences Waterworth K, Gaffney M, Taylor N, Gibson BE. [https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/09593985.2021.2011511 The civil rights of disabled children in physiotherapy practices]. Physiotherapy Theory and Practice. 2021 Dec 13:1-3.. Sometimes impairment is considered to be a biomechanical, physiological or cognitive condition. Consequently, disability is the experience of impairment as it is structured into a society, and is socially created. Using able-bodied children as a frame of reference contributes to an attitude of wanting children with disabilities ‘to do things normally’ rather than to accept the ‘normality of doing things differently’ Van Melik R, Althuizen N. [https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/tesg.12457 Inclusive play policies: Disabled children and their access to Dutch playgrounds.] Tijdschrift voor economische en sociale geografie. 2022 Apr;113(2):117-30.. Indigenous children with disability are considered to have a ‘triple disadvantage’ because of additional limitations that they experience Greenstein C, Lowell A, Thomas D. [https://ris.cdu.edu.au/ws/portalfiles/portal/24983525/1_s2.0_S1836955315001010_main.pdf Communication and context are important to Indigenous children with physical disability and their carers at a community-based physiotherapy service: a qualitative study]. Journal of Physiotherapy. 2016 Jan 1;62(1):42-7..


It is crucial to provide childrenwith disabilities thechanceto表达自己,无论是在教育andhealthcare settingsAllowingchildren with disabilitiestoexperienceenjoyment and maintainasenseofcontrol over their lives and activities isofutmost importanceIt comes as no surprise that therapy is better received by childrenwith disabilitieswhen it is enjoyable, pleasurable, andengaging for them. Children with disabilities need the opportunity to express themselves, includingineducation andhealthservice contextsIt is important thatchildren with disabilities可以交货perience enjoyment and be abletoexercise appropriate control overtheirlives and activities. Not surprising,children with disabilities experience therapy more positively whenitis fun, pleasurable and/or engaging . They also perceivetherepetitionofparticular aspects of therapy sometimesasdull and boringOf course,such interventions are promoted to prevent changes at structural, functional or activity levels through regular repetitionNonetheless, besides being boring, such interventions may be uncomfortable, painful or limitchildren’sopportunities forparticipation inother activities or roles. Families reported tensionsandparental stress of imposing sometimes painful exercises on their childrenParents struggle with situations where home programmes may be addressing long-term rehabilitation outcomes, but potentially harming children in socio-emotional ways3" />
Especially for a childwith disabilities,thedefinition of participation in physical activity cannot be restrictedtohealthandphysical outcomesPhysical activity ofchildren with disabilitiesis rather a broader healthexperience, situated withinadynamic child-environment interaction, which acknowledges the aspectsofthe qualityofthe experienceUnderestimating the abilities of a childwith disabilitiesin taking part in physical activity and play can result in lower expectations and fewer opportunities, andreduce their engagementin health-promoting behavioursWhenchildren with disabilitiesengage in moderatetohigh intensity physical activity duringtheirchildhood, itcan reduce their predisposed risk forthedevelopmentofsecondary health conditions suchasnon-communicable diseasesEnjoyable physical activities will foster childhood experiences that nourish the psychosocial development of children’s interpersonal skills,their self-confidence and self-efficacyTo increase theirchildren’s participation inphysical activity has been described as a primary goal of both parentsandprofessionals in childhood disability1" />


Considering the numerous benefitsofoutdoor activitiesand risky playfor both children with disabilitiesandtheir caregivers, it begs the question astowhy health professionals have not fully embraced these opportunitiesThe Australian Physiotherapy Association,infact, explicitly recommended that children actively participate in riskyplayasameans to counteractthenegative effectsofphysical inactivity resultingfromthe COVID-19 pandemicResearch indicates that physiotherapists should focus on developing processesandpractices that prioritize fun, engagement, andaffirmation for each individualchildthroughout every interaction, particularly for children with disabilities
总的来说,孩子们努力执行的nd exciting play activities that involve some kindofrisk such as climbing or jumping at great heights, swinging, playing or engaging in roughandtumble play. Freerisky playoffers opportunities to master age-adequate challenges, manage fearsand tolearn life skillsReasonable risk takingin playisafundamental factor in emotional development, andthedevelopmentofgross motor and cognitive functions.Sandseter EB, Kennair LE. Children's risky playfroman evolutionary perspective: [https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/147470491100900212 The anti-phobic effects of thrilling experiences. Evolutionary psychology] 2011 Apr 1;9(2):147470491100900212. Children’s opportunities to engage in free outdoor risky play are limited by socialandenvironmental factors, andthe concerns of adults. These can compromise thechild's overall health and wellbeing


So, why do health professionals not make use of the benefits of outdoor activities (for both children with disabilities and their caregivers) and risky play? The Australian Physiotherapy Association explicitly recommended that children should activelyengage in risky play,虽nterbalance the negative trends of physical inactivity due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Research suggests that physiotherapists should develop processes and practicesfor children with disabilitiesthat are fun, engaging and affirming to each individual child in every moment of interaction This suggestion applies also to the constructionofhome programs, which could be based on an understandingofparticipation in outdoor physical activity that includes also the quality of the experience,as suggested by Ross et al. (2016) . This could counterbalance that opportunities forchildren with disabilitiesto spend time in natural environments with their families are less than for able-bodied childrenDifferent commitments of family members and organizing therapies occupy a great deal of caregivers’ time, leaving little chance for outdoor recreation5">von Benzon N.[https://doiorg/10.1080/09687599.2010.489313 Moving on from ramps? The utility of the social model of disability for facilitating experiences of nature for disabled children]Disabil Soc [Internet].2010 Aug1[cited 2022 Jun 21];25(5):617–26. Available from: https://doi.org/10.1080/09687599.2010489313.Combining physiotherapy or occupational therapy and outdoor activities either in the therapy-setting or when creating home programs can contribute to pleasurable, positive relationships and achievements which are valued by children with disabilities .
Toengage infree andrisky playis even more crucialfor children with disabilitiesthan for their peers without disabilitiesA lackofaccessible playgrounds or overprotective attitudesofcaregivers are major barriers,preventingchildren with disabilitiesfrom fully benefiting from this kind of play experience2">Caprino F.[https://www.researchgatenet/publication/338067931_When_the_risk_is_worth_it_the_inclusion_of_children_with_disabilities_in_free_risky_play WHEN THE RISK IS WORTH IT: THE INCLUSION OF CHILDREN WITH DISABILITIES IN FREE RISKY PLAY.]Today's Children are Tomorrow's Parents2018 Feb1.


Playing freely outdoors and having access to natural environments is particularly important for childrenwith(multiple)impairments.Sensory explorationofsmells,textures and sounds of outdoor spaces can enhance children’s awarenessandappreciation of natural environments, and contribute totheirhappiness,wellbeing and overallhealth.Outdoor play provides opportunities for exploring boundariesand toengage with the unknownorunexpected.This,in turn,improves levelsof信心andself-esteemFor example,for some children with disabilities putting their handsorfeet outside into water,mud, sand or even snow might be perceivedasa risk by them, just becauseit isan entirely new experience! Someone might have never touchedatree’s bark or a rock beforeandcould be overwhelmed by this feelingA formofrisk-taking, in that sense, could also betomakeanenvironment accessible (withsensitive facilitation by a caregiver or therapist) for someone who has difficulties in accessing it on their ownname=":6">CNAC Podcast.[https://childnatureca/topic/accessibility-risky-play/ Accessibility, DisabilityandRisky Play] [Internet].Child and Nature Alliance of Canada. [cited2022Nov30]可用from:>https://childnatureca/topic/accessibility-risky-play/</nowiki></ref>Therefore, what is a risk, may be understood differently by different persons in different situationsFurthermore, offering choices of how to master a risky situation, also helps to facilitate the child’s decision-makingand todevelop self-efficacy. Inchildren withdisabilities, the understanding of risk-taking and risky outdoor play is wider and more inclusiveFacilitating the processofrisk-taking and risky play activities of children with disabilities does not contradict the original intention of the concept of risky play as being unstructured, child-driven activitiesname=":6" />
The social exclusion of peoplewith impairmentshas been supported by applying a medical modelofdisability,which located disability within individualsand theirbodies. Based on this model, healthinterventions, including physiotherapy, aimed (andsometimes still aim)toeliminateorameliorate individual characteristics of a child's impairment.Thiskind of thinking minimises any consideration of disabling environmental and social influences.Waterworth K, Gaffney M,Taylor N,Gibson BE. [https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/09593985.2021.2011511 The civil rightsofdisabled children in physiotherapy practices]. Physiotherapy TheoryandPractice. 2021 Dec 13:1-3 Sometimes impairment is considered to be a biomechanical,physiologicalorcognitive condition. Consequently,disability is the experience of impairmentas it isstructured intoasociety,andis socially createdUsing non-disabled children as a frameofreference contributesto anattitude of wanting childrenwithdisabilities ‘to do things normally’ rather than to accept the ‘normality of doing things differently’.Van Melik R, Althuizen N.[https://onlinelibrarywiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/tesg.12457 Inclusiveplaypolicies: Disabled childrenandtheir access to Dutch playgrounds.]Tijdschrift voor economische en sociale geografie.2022Apr;113(2):117-30. Indigenous children with disability are considered to have a ‘triple disadvantage’ because of additional limitations that they experience.4">Greenstein C, Lowell A, Thomas D. [https://ris.cdu.eduau/ws/portalfiles/portal/24983525/1_s20_S1836955315001010_mainpdf Communicationandcontext are importanttoIndigenouschildren withphysical disability and their carers at a community-based physiotherapy service: a qualitative study]JournalofPhysiotherapy. 2016 Jan 1;62(1):42-7.</ref>


Most parents would appreciate that their children could be abletoplay outside unsupervised,but their anxietiesincluding‘stranger danger’andconcerns about road safety prevent them from providing much freedom to their childrenDue to a range of social and environmental barriers,children with disabilitiesare restricted from this freedomtoa greater extent thantheirable-bodied peers Children,andchildren with disabilitiesin particular,are often viewed as being dependentandvulnerable rather than being competent and able to actively make choices and participate in decision-making0" /> 3" />.It has been reported that children whoaredeaf and children with communication impairments,autismormultiple health requirements are those most isolatedandthe least likelyto beasked and heard0" />
Children with disabilities need the opportunitytoexpress themselves, includingin educationandhealth service contextsIt is important thatchildren with disabilities可以交货perience enjoyment and be abletoexercise appropriate control overtheirlives and activitiesNot surprisingly, children with disabilitiesexperience therapy more positively when it is fun,pleasurableand/or engaging.3" /> 4" />他们也认为特定的重复pects of therapy sometimes as dull and boringOf course, such interventionsare晋升为防止修改结构,功能nal or activity levels through regular repetition. Nonetheless, besides being boring, such interventions may be uncomfortable,painfulorlimit a child's opportunities for participation in other activities or roles. Families reported tensionandparental stress when havingtoimpose sometimes painful exercises on their children. Parents struggle with situations where home programmes maybe解决长期康复结果,但是potentially harming children in socioemotional ways.3" />


Also,other factors can hinder children with disabilities to fully participate in risky play. For instance, motor and sensory limitations can hamper their free movement and explorationof theenvironment. For example, children with sight impairments sometimes feel less able to carry out tasks than their peers, to take part in physicalactivities, to make strolls on foot on their own outside of school, or with other children, which leads to higher inactivity Williams G, Aggio D, Stubbs B, Pardhan S, Gardner B, Smith L. [https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S1936657417301346 Physical activity levels in children with sensory problems: Cross-sectional analyses from the Millennium Cohort Study]. Disability and health journal. 2018 Jan 1;11(1):58-61.. Furthermore, intellectual limitations can make it difficultforthe child to assess and deal with risks . Oftenchildren with disabilitiesdepend on the presence of a caregiver,andrequire a higher level of adult supervision; for example children with Autistic Spectrum Disorders as they are prone to run away . The degree of acceptable risk forrisky play活动必须为残疾孩子sessed according to their individual traits. Sometimes certain activities must be avoided, such as tree climbing by children who suffer from epilepsy .
So,why do health professionals not make useof thebenefits of outdooractivities (forbothchildren with disabilities andtheir caregivers) andrisky play?


Sometimesit is not easy for caregivers to find a balance between taking risks and maintaining health and safety for children with disabilities,and results sometimesin limited play opportunities for these children Inclusion of disabled children in primary school playgrounds - Teaching Expertise [Internet]. 2009 [cited 2022 Jun 21]. Available from: https://www.teachingexpertise.com/articles/inclusion-of-disabled-children-in-primary-school-playgrounds/Additionally, and unfortunately, children with disabilities are disproportionately susceptible to bullying, when children who do not reflect dominant cultural norms are excluded within particular play spaces Jeanes R, Magee J.‘Canwe play on the swings and roundabouts?’: creating inclusive play spaces for disabled young people and their families.Leis Stud [Internet]. 2012 Apr 1[cited 2022 Jun 21];31(2):193–210. Available from: https://doiorg/10.1080/02614367.2011.589864Also, playgrounds can be sites where young people define andlegitimizerepressive social hierarchies Such discriminating experiences prevent children with disabilitiesto useoutdoor play spaces even more. Places which exclude children with disabilities are rarely natural constructs, but ratherresultsof dominant relations, policy and poor planning, whichallows able-bodiedchildren to benefit at the expense of children with disabilities Furthermore, children with disabilities are more likely to grow up in families with low incomes than children who areable-bodied, which may restricttravellingtogether to participate in outdoor leisure activities Therefore, to improve access to inclusive outdoor play the cooperation of multiple agencies is required, including the involvement of children and young people with disabilities and their families
The Australian Physiotherapy Association explicitly recommended that children should actively engage in risky play to counterbalance the negative trends of physical inactivity due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Research suggests that physiotherapists should develop processes and practices for children with disabilities that are fun, engaging and affirming to each individual child in every moment of interaction. This suggestion also applies to the construction of home programmes - i.e. we should consider both participation in outdoor physical activity and the quality of the experience. This approach could help to counterbalance the fact that opportunities for children with disabilities to spend time in natural environments with their families are less than for non-disabled children. Different commitments of family members and organising therapies occupy a great deal of a caregiver's time, leaving little chance for outdoor recreation.von Benzon N. [https://doi.org/10.1080/09687599.2010.489313 Moving on from ramps? The utility of the social model of disability for facilitating experiences of nature for disabled children]. Disabil Soc [Internet]. 2010 Aug 1 [cited 2022 Jun 21];25(5):617–26. Available from: https://doi.org/10.1080/09687599.2010.489313 Combining physiotherapy or occupational therapy and outdoor activities either in the therapy-setting or when creating home programmes can contribute to pleasurable, positive relationships and achievements which are valued by children with disabilities.
Playing freely outdoors and having access to natural environments is particularly important for children with (multiple) impairments. Sensory exploration of smells, textures and sounds of outdoor spaces can enhance children’s awareness and appreciation of natural environments, and contribute to their happiness, wellbeing and overall health. Outdoor play provides opportunities for exploring boundaries and to engage with the unknown or unexpected. This, in turn, improves levels of confidence and self-esteem. For example, for some children with disabilities putting their hands or feet outside into water, mud, sand or even snow might be perceived as a risk by them, just because it is an entirely new experience. Someone might have never touched a tree’s bark or a rock before and could be overwhelmed by this feeling. A form of risk-taking, in that sense, could also be to make an environment accessible (with sensitive facilitation by a caregiver or therapist) for someone who has difficulties in accessingiton their own.CNAC Podcast. [https://childnature.ca/topic/accessibility-risky-play/ Accessibility, Disability and Risky Play] [Internet]. Child and Nature Alliance of Canada. [cited 2022 Nov 30]. Available from: https://childnature.ca/topic/accessibility-risky-play/ Therefore, what is a risk, may be understood differently by different persons in different situations. Furthermore, offering choices of how to master a risky situation, also helps to facilitate the child’s decision-making and to develop self-efficacy. In children with disabilities, the understanding of risk-taking and risky outdoor playiswider and more inclusive. Facilitating the process of risk-taking and risky play activities of children with disabilities doesnotcontradict the original intention of the concept of risky play as being unstructured, child-driven activities.
Most parents would appreciate that their children could be able to play outside unsupervised, but their anxieties including ‘stranger danger’ and concerns about road safety prevent them from providing much freedom to their children. Due to a range of social and environmental barriers, children with disabilities are restricted from this freedom to a greater extent than their non-disabled peers. Children, and children with disabilities in particular, are often viewed as being dependent and vulnerable rather than being competent and able to actively make choices and participate in decision-making. It has been reported that children who are deaf and children with communication impairments, autism or multiple health requirements are those most isolated and the least likely to be asked and heard.
Other factors can also affect the ability of children with disabilities to fully participate in risky play. For instance, motor and sensory limitations can hamper their free movement and exploration of the environment. For example, children with sight impairments sometimes feel less able to carry out tasks than their peers, to take part in physical activities, to take strolls on foot on their own outside of school, or with other children, which leads to higher inactivity.Williams G, Aggio D, Stubbs B, Pardhan S, Gardner B, Smith L. [https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S1936657417301346 Physical activity levels in children with sensory problems: Cross-sectional analyses from the Millennium Cohort Study]. Disability and health journal. 2018 Jan 1;11(1):58-61. Furthermore, intellectual limitations can make it difficult for the child to assess and deal with risks. Often children with disabilities depend on the presence of a caregiver, and require a higher level of adult supervision (e.g. children with Autism Spectrum Disorders as they are prone to run away). The degree of acceptable risk for risky play activities in a child with disabilities must be assessed according to their individual traits. Sometimes, certain activities must be avoided, such as tree climbing by children who have epilepsy.
It might not always beeasy for caregivers to find a balance between taking risks and maintaining health and safety for children with disabilities,which could resultin limited play opportunities for these children[https://www.teachingexpertise.com/articles/inclusion-of-disabled-children-in-primary-school-playgrounds/Inclusion of disabled children in primary school playgrounds - Teaching Expertise](互联网)。2009(引用2022年6月21日)。可用from:https://www.teachingexpertise.com/articles/inclusion-of-disabled-children-in-primary-school-playgrounds/ Additionally, and unfortunately, children with disabilities are disproportionately susceptible to bullying, when children who do not reflect dominant cultural norms are excluded within particular play spaces Jeanes R, Magee J.‘[https://vuir.vu.edu.au/26210/ Canwe play on the swings and roundabouts?’: creating inclusive play spaces for disabled young people and their families.]Leisure Studies.2012 Apr 1;31(2):193-210 Also, playgrounds can be sites where young people define andlegitimiserepressive social hierarchies Such discriminating experiences prevent children with disabilitiesfrom usingoutdoor play spaces even more. Places which exclude children with disabilities are rarely natural constructs, but ratherthe resultof dominant relations, policy and poor planning, whichallow non-disabledchildren to benefit at the expense of children with disabilitiesFurthermore, children with disabilities are more likely to grow up in families with low incomes than children who arenon-disabled, which may restricta family's ability to traveltogether to participate in outdoor leisure activities Therefore, to improve access to inclusive outdoor play the cooperation of multiple agencies is required, including the involvement of children and young people with disabilities and their families


This video by Voice America discusses a special playground for children with special needs:
This video by Voice America discusses a special playground for children with special needs:

Revision as of 21:03, 21 June 2023

Original Editor- Andrea SturmTop Contributors- Special Contributors/ Inclusion of Children with Disabilities in Free Risky Play
Original Editor-Andrea Sturm
Top Contributors- {{Special:Contributors/Template:Inclusion of Children with Disabilities in Free Risky Play}}

A child’s right to play is enshrined by article 31 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child. However, this right is not always met appropriately by institutions, governments and policymakers.[1]Play also includes physical activity, which is crucial for children to maintain their healthy social, physical and psychological development. About 80% of the children around the globe do not meet the recommendations of the WHO for 60 minutes of moderate to vigorous physical activity per day.[2]But it is not just the intensity that is relevant for health benefits, especially in children with disabilities. The importance of global psychosocial experiences such as satisfaction, enjoyment and perceptions of inclusion have been highlighted as well.[3]Ross et al.[3]define participation of children with disabilities in physical activity as follows:

'Physical activity participation describes “experiences in physically demanding movement, sport, game, or recreational play that results in energy expenditure and perceptions of communal involvement."'[3]

The participation in physical activity by children with disabilities can be qualified by:[3]

  1. Level: the frequency of attendance and intensity of physical exertion
  2. Quality of experience: self-perceived feelings of social inclusion, enjoyment, self-efficacy, and satisfaction
  3. Overall profile: the extent to which a child’s level of participation matches their expectation for a quality experience



Especially for a child with disabilities, the definition of participation in physical activity cannot be restricted to health and physical outcomes. Physical activity of children with disabilities is rather a broader health experience, situated within a dynamic child-environment interaction, which acknowledges the aspects of the quality of the experience. Underestimating the abilities of a child with disabilities in taking part in physical activity and play can result in lower expectations and fewer opportunities, and reduce their engagement in health-promoting behaviours. When children with disabilities engage in moderate to high intensity physical activity during their childhood, it can reduce their predisposed risk for the development of secondary health conditions such as non-communicable diseases. Enjoyable physical activities will foster childhood experiences that nourish the psychosocial development of children’s interpersonal skills, their self-confidence and self-efficacy. To increase their children’s participation in physical activity has been described as a primary goal of both parents and professionals in childhood disability.[3]

总的来说,孩子们努力执行的nd exciting play activities that involve some kind of risk such as climbing or jumping at great heights, swinging, playing or engaging in rough and tumble play. Free risky play offers opportunities to master age-adequate challenges, manage fears and to learn life skills. Reasonable risk taking in play is a fundamental factor in emotional development, and the development of gross motor and cognitive functions.[4]儿童参与的机会ree outdoor risky play are limited by social and environmental factors, and the concerns of adults. These can compromise the child's overall health and wellbeing.

To engage in free and risky play is even more crucial for children with disabilities than for their peers without disabilities. A lack of accessible playgrounds or overprotective attitudes of caregivers are major barriers, preventing children with disabilities from fully benefiting from this kind of play experience.[5]

障碍患者ha的社会排斥s been supported by applying a medical model of disability, which located disability within individuals and their bodies. Based on this model, health interventions, including physiotherapy, aimed (and sometimes still aim) to eliminate or ameliorate individual characteristics of a child's impairment. This kind of thinking minimises any consideration of disabling environmental and social influences.[6]Sometimes impairment is considered to be a biomechanical, physiological or cognitive condition. Consequently, disability is the experience of impairment as it is structured into a society, and is socially created. Using non-disabled children as a frame of reference contributes to an attitude of wanting children with disabilities ‘to do things normally’ rather than to accept the ‘normality of doing things differently’.[7]Indigenous children with disability are considered to have a ‘triple disadvantage’ because of additional limitations that they experience.[8]

Children with disabilities need the opportunity to express themselves, including in education and health service contexts. It is important that children with disabilities can experience enjoyment and be able to exercise appropriate control over their lives and activities. Not surprisingly, children with disabilities experience therapy more positively when it is fun, pleasurable and/or engaging.[6][8]他们也认为特定的重复pects of therapy sometimes as dull and boring. Of course, such interventions are promoted to prevent changes at structural, functional or activity levels through regular repetition. Nonetheless, besides being boring, such interventions may be uncomfortable, painful or limit a child's opportunities for participation in other activities or roles. Families reported tension and parental stress when having to impose sometimes painful exercises on their children. Parents struggle with situations where home programmes may be addressing long-term rehabilitation outcomes, but potentially harming children in socioemotional ways.[6]

So, why do health professionals not make use of the benefits of outdoor activities (for both children with disabilities and their caregivers) and risky play?

The Australian Physiotherapy Association explicitly recommended that children should actively engage in risky play to counterbalance the negative trends of physical inactivity due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Research suggests that physiotherapists should develop processes and practices for children with disabilities that are fun, engaging and affirming to each individual child in every moment of interaction.[6]This suggestion also applies to the construction of home programmes - i.e. we should consider both participation in outdoor physical activity and the quality of the experience.[3]This approach could help to counterbalance the fact that opportunities for children with disabilities to spend time in natural environments with their families are less than for non-disabled children. Different commitments of family members and organising therapies occupy a great deal of a caregiver's time, leaving little chance for outdoor recreation.[9]Combining physiotherapy or occupational therapy and outdoor activities either in the therapy-setting or when creating home programmes can contribute to pleasurable, positive relationships and achievements which are valued by children with disabilities.[6]

Playing freely outdoors and having access to natural environments is particularly important for children with (multiple) impairments. Sensory exploration of smells, textures and sounds of outdoor spaces can enhance children’s awareness and appreciation of natural environments, and contribute to their happiness, wellbeing and overall health. Outdoor play provides opportunities for exploring boundaries and to engage with the unknown or unexpected. This, in turn, improves levels of confidence and self-esteem. For example, for some children with disabilities putting their hands or feet outside into water, mud, sand or even snow might be perceived as a risk by them, just because it is an entirely new experience. Someone might have never touched a tree’s bark or a rock before and could be overwhelmed by this feeling. A form of risk-taking, in that sense, could also be to make an environment accessible (with sensitive facilitation by a caregiver or therapist) for someone who has difficulties in accessing it on their own.[10]Therefore, what is a risk, may be understood differently by different persons in different situations. Furthermore, offering choices of how to master a risky situation, also helps to facilitate the child’s decision-making and to develop self-efficacy. In children with disabilities, the understanding of risk-taking and risky outdoor play is wider and more inclusive. Facilitating the process of risk-taking and risky play activities of children with disabilities does not contradict the original intention of the concept of risky play as being unstructured, child-driven activities.[10]

Most parents would appreciate that their children could be able to play outside unsupervised, but their anxieties including ‘stranger danger’ and concerns about road safety prevent them from providing much freedom to their children. Due to a range of social and environmental barriers, children with disabilities are restricted from this freedom to a greater extent than their non-disabled peers.[1]Children, and children with disabilities in particular, are often viewed as being dependent and vulnerable rather than being competent and able to actively make choices and participate in decision-making.[1][6]It has been reported that children who are deaf and children with communication impairments, autism or multiple health requirements are those most isolated and the least likely to be asked and heard.[1]

Other factors can also affect the ability of children with disabilities to fully participate in risky play. For instance, motor and sensory limitations can hamper their free movement and exploration of the environment. For example, children with sight impairments sometimes feel less able to carry out tasks than their peers, to take part in physical activities, to take strolls on foot on their own outside of school, or with other children, which leads to higher inactivity.[11]Furthermore, intellectual limitations can make it difficult for the child to assess and deal with risks.[5]残疾儿童常常依赖于前sence of a caregiver, and require a higher level of adult supervision (e.g. children with Autism Spectrum Disorders as they are prone to run away).[9]The degree of acceptable risk for risky play activities in a child with disabilities must be assessed according to their individual traits. Sometimes, certain activities must be avoided, such as tree climbing by children who have epilepsy.[5]

It might not always be easy for caregivers to find a balance between taking risks and maintaining health and safety for children with disabilities, which could result in limited play opportunities for these children.[12]Additionally, and unfortunately, children with disabilities are disproportionately susceptible to bullying, when children who do not reflect dominant cultural norms are excluded within particular play spaces.[1][13]Also, playgrounds can be sites where young people define and legitimise repressive social hierarchies.[13]Such discriminating experiences prevent children with disabilities from using outdoor play spaces even more. Places which exclude children with disabilities are rarely natural constructs, but rather the result of dominant relations, policy and poor planning, which allow non-disabled children to benefit at the expense of children with disabilities.[13]Furthermore, children with disabilities are more likely to grow up in families with low incomes than children who are non-disabled, which may restrict a family's ability to travel together to participate in outdoor leisure activities.[9]Therefore, to improve access to inclusive outdoor play the cooperation of multiple agencies is required, including the involvement of children and young people with disabilities and their families.[1]

This video by Voice America discusses a special playground for children with special needs:

Resources[edit|edit source]

References[edit|edit source]

  1. 1.01.11.21.31.41.5Route A. Joining the big adventure • SEN Magazine [Internet]. SEN Magazine. 2012 [cited 2022 Jun 21]. Available from:https://senmagazine.co.uk/content/activities/outdoors/1073/joining-the-big-adventure-making-outdoor-play-accessible-to-all/
  2. Aubert S, Barnes JD, Abdeta C, Abi Nader P, Adeniyi AF, Aguilar-Farias N, Tenesaca DS, Bhawra J, Brazo-Sayavera J, Cardon G, Chang CK.Global matrix 3.0 physical activity report card grades for children and youth: results and analysis from 49 countries.Journal of physical activity and health. 2018 Jan 2;15(s2):S251-73.
  3. 3.03.13.23.33.43.5Ross SM, Bogart KR, Logan SW, Case L, Fine J, Thompson H.Physical activity participation of disabled children: A systematic review of conceptual and methodological approaches in health research.Frontiers in public health. 2016 Sep 5;4:187.
  4. Sandseter EB, Kennair LE. Children's risky play from an evolutionary perspective:The anti-phobic effects of thrilling experiences. Evolutionary psychology.2011 Apr 1;9(2):147470491100900212.
  5. 5.05.15.2Caprino F。WHEN THE RISK IS WORTH IT: THE INCLUSION OF CHILDREN WITH DISABILITIES IN FREE RISKY PLAY.Today's Children are Tomorrow's Parents. 2018 Feb 1.
  6. 6.06.16.26.36.46.5Waterworth K, Gaffney M, Taylor N, Gibson BE.The civil rights of disabled children in physiotherapy practices.Physiotherapy Theory and Practice. 2021 Dec 13:1-3.
  7. Van Melik R, Althuizen N.Inclusive play policies: Disabled children and their access to Dutch playgrounds.Tijdschrift voor economische en sociale geografie. 2022 Apr;113(2):117-30.
  8. 8.08.1Greenstein C, Lowell A, Thomas D.Communication and context are important to Indigenous children with physical disability and their carers at a community-based physiotherapy service: a qualitative study.Journal of Physiotherapy. 2016 Jan 1;62(1):42-7.
  9. 9.09.19.2von Benzon N.Moving on from ramps? The utility of the social model of disability for facilitating experiences of nature for disabled children.Disabil Soc [Internet]. 2010 Aug 1 [cited 2022 Jun 21];25(5):617–26. Available from: https://doi.org/10.1080/09687599.2010.489313
  10. 10.010.1CNAC Podcast.Accessibility, Disability and Risky Play(互联网)。Child and Nature Alliance of Canada. [cited 2022 Nov 30]. Available from: https://childnature.ca/topic/accessibility-risky-play/
  11. Williams G, Aggio D, Stubbs B, Pardhan S, Gardner B, Smith L.Physical activity levels in children with sensory problems: Cross-sectional analyses from the Millennium Cohort Study.Disability and health journal. 2018 Jan 1;11(1):58-61.
  12. Inclusion of disabled children in primary school playgrounds - Teaching Expertise(互联网)。2009(引用2022年6月21日)。可用from: https://www.teachingexpertise.com/articles/inclusion-of-disabled-children-in-primary-school-playgrounds/
  13. 13.013.113.2Jeanes R, Magee J. ‘Can we play on the swings and roundabouts?’: creating inclusive play spaces for disabled young people and their families.Leisure Studies. 2012 Apr 1;31(2):193-210.