Barriers and Challenges for Visually Impaired Students in PE—An Interview Study with Students in Austria, Germany, and the USA
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Sample
2.2. Data Collection and Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Findings across the Sample by Categories
3.1.1. Societal Aspects—Discursive Ideas of Normal
3.1.2. Interpersonal and Emotional Aspects—Social Interactions
3.1.3. Didactic Aspects—Teaching Methodology and Organization of PE
3.2. Results of the Type-Forming Analysis
- Type 1: “No Problems”
- Type 2: “Problematic Society”
- Type 3: “Adaptions Needed”
- Type 4: “Feeling OK”
- Type 5: “Feeling Relatively Normal”
- Type 6: “Concerned”
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Interviewee | Country | Gender | School Type | Interview Setting | Age/Grade * |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Clara | Austria | female | specialized vocational school | single interview by telephone | 21 years |
Esther | Austria | female | specialized vocational school | single interview by telephone | 16 years |
Florian | Austria | male | specialized vocational school | single interview by telephone | 19 years |
Lara | Austria | female | specialized vocational school | single interview by telephone | no information |
Michael | Austria | male | specialized vocational school | single interview by telephone | 17 years |
Miriam | Austria | female | specialized vocational school | single interview by telephone | no information |
Simon | Austria | male | specialized vocational school | single interview by telephone | 16 years |
Alexander | Germany | male | special needs high school | tandem interview with Marlene, face to face | 10th grade |
Giorgio | Germany | male | special needs high school | tandem interview with Timo, face-to-face | 10th grade |
Ibrahim | Germany | male | special needs high school | single interview, face-to-face | 10th grade |
Marlene | Germany | female | special needs high school | tandem interview with Alexander, face to face | 10th grade |
Pablo | Germany | male | special needs high school | tandem interview with Serena, face to face | 10th grade |
Phillip | Germany | male | special needs high school | single interview, face-to-face | 10th grade |
Serena | Germany | female | special needs high school | tandem interview with Pablo, face to face | 10th grade |
Timo | Germany | male | special needs high school | tandem interview with Giorgio, face to face | 10th grade |
Diana | US | female | general high school | single interview by video conference | 15 years old |
Julian | US | male | general high school | single interview by video conference | 14 years old |
Lex | US | female | general high school | single interview by video conference | 15 years old |
Marge | US | female | general high school | single interview by video conference | 14 years old |
Michelle | US | female | general high school | single interview by video conference | 13 years old |
Robert | US | male | general high school | single interview by video conference | 15 years old |
Thomas | US | male | general high school | single interview by video conference | 12 years old |
Category | Subcategory | Anchor Example |
---|---|---|
Societal aspects/discursive ideas of normal | Feelings of (not) being normal | “At that moment you just wish you were a normal child.” (Clara, AT, 00:11:18-9) |
Deviation from the “norm” as a problem | “We actually came to this school in order to no longer have this disadvantage with this vision” (Giorgio; GER, 00:11:09-4) | |
Perceived societal relevance of having an abled body | “I feel like people get a certain view of me that I don’t want them to have. They sort of see me as incapable” (Marge, US, 0:20:16-4) | |
Interpersonal and emotional aspects/social interactions | (Not) Feeling valued by peers | “In PE, because we’re not that many people, we actually always have a lot of fun. We also look out for each other, so if someone really can’t do it, then we help him or her; or if I don’t see something, for example, or if it doesn’t work for me, then I say, can we change it like this? And that actually works quite well” (Lara, AT, 00:02:15-1) |
(Not) Feeling valued by teacher(s) | “I think they care, I think they want the best for me” (Michelle, US, 0:19:27-5) | |
(In-)Dependence (on teachers) | “And then it happens that some people make fun of them. But the teachers actually try to prevent that directly” (Timo, GER, 00:24:08-7) | |
Relevance of impairment for the social interaction | “…sometimes I have a tougher time with groups, ‘cause not really many people want to play with the blind kid” (Robert, US, 0:25:42-0) | |
Didactic aspects/teaching methodology and organization of PE | Adaptions given/not given | “I feel like they [teachers] don’t really go out their way to help visually impaired people, […] They’ll show sighted people how to do it visually, but they won’t really explain it to visually impaired people hands on, like they have—pretty much have to” (Lily, US, 00:05:17-8) |
Development of adaption | “Anyway, they are people who are very open to ideas and suggestions from us students, which I really like. And what I also like about our PE teachers is that they care about each and every one of us in PE class” (Alexander, GER, 00:04:31-2) | |
Quality of adaptions out of the individual perspective | “When we have physical education, then I always do my best to be there […] generally, everything is adapted to the blind, thus adapted to the visually impaired and blind. And that’s why […] I have a lot of fun with it and always try, and always try to do my very best in class” (Phillip, GER, 00:08:31-8) | |
Exclusion (of activities or lessons) | “It was like this from the beginning, that they said, no I am not allowed to participate” (Florian, AT, 00:19:09-8) |
Type | Societal Aspects | Interpersonal and Emotional Aspects | Didactical Aspects |
---|---|---|---|
“No problems“ | Neutral as a given fact | Described as positive | Rarely problematized |
“Problematic society“ | Described as problematic | Described as positive | Described as positive |
“Adaptions needed“ | Rarely problematized | Described as positive | Described as problematic |
“Feeling OK“ | Described as problematic | Described as positive | Described as problematic |
“Relatively normal“ | Neutral as a given fact | Described as problematic | Described as problematic |
“Concerned“ | Described as problematic | Described as problematic | Described as problematic |
Type | Respondents Assigned | Female | Specialized School | AT | GER | US |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
“No problems“ | 3 | 2 | 3 | 2 | 1 | - |
“Problematic society“ | 3 | - | 3 | - | 3 | - |
“Adaptions needed“ | 3 | - | 2 | 2 | - | 1 |
“Feeling OK“ | 4 | 1 | 3 | 1 | 2 | 1 |
“Relatively normal“ | 2 | 1 | 2 | - | 2 | - |
“Concerned“ | 7 | 6 | 2 | 2 | - | 5 |
Total | 22 | 10 | 15 | 7 | 8 | 7 |
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Ruin, S.; Haegele, J.A.; Giese, M.; Baumgärtner, J. Barriers and Challenges for Visually Impaired Students in PE—An Interview Study with Students in Austria, Germany, and the USA. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20, 7081. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20227081
Ruin S, Haegele JA, Giese M, Baumgärtner J. Barriers and Challenges for Visually Impaired Students in PE—An Interview Study with Students in Austria, Germany, and the USA. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2023; 20(22):7081. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20227081
Chicago/Turabian StyleRuin, Sebastian, Justin A. Haegele, Martin Giese, and Jana Baumgärtner. 2023. "Barriers and Challenges for Visually Impaired Students in PE—An Interview Study with Students in Austria, Germany, and the USA" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 20, no. 22: 7081. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20227081
APA StyleRuin, S., Haegele, J. A., Giese, M., & Baumgärtner, J. (2023). Barriers and Challenges for Visually Impaired Students in PE—An Interview Study with Students in Austria, Germany, and the USA. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20(22), 7081. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20227081