6533b7d2fe1ef96bd125f455
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Latvian College Students' Perspectives on Inclusion
Sarmite TubeleVicki A. McginleyDavid BoltonKim DoanIeva Margevicasubject
media_common.quotation_subjectLatvianSpecial needsSpecial educationlanguage.human_languageTeacher educationEducationPerceptionPedagogylanguageMathematics educationPsychologyInclusion (education)media_commondescription
Abstract This study reports on the perspectives of 79 Latvian college students' perception of inclusion of children with disabilities. Education majors from the University of Latvia and non-education majors from Riga Technical University responded to a 27-item Likert scale format and four open-ended questions by filling out an electronic survey. A principal components factor analysis of the data was conducted yielding three factors. The three-factor structure was similar to a previous study, with the first two factors being reversed. Males demonstrated greater variability on factor 1, negative effects of inclusion, than females, and education majors reported perceiving fewer benefits of segregating students with disabilities than non-education majors. Overall, the results indicate mixed perceptions of inclusion, and a need to educate both education and non-education majors on the benefits of inclusion.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2017-12-01 | Journal of International Special Needs Education |