“…The type of typically developing students’ attitudes towards students with intellectual disabilities, which are developed in a school environment, seems to be shaped by a combination of factors. The significant factors are the functionality of the disabled student (De Laat, Freriksen and Vervloed, 2013), the age (De Boer, Pijl and Minnaert, 2012), the gender (Bossaert, Colpin, Pijl et al, 2011), the family culture of the typically developing students (Morton and Campbell, 2008; Vignes, Godeau, Sentenac et al, 2009), and the frequency and quality of the social interaction between typically developing students and students with disabilities as determined by peer culture (Barbas, Birbili, Stagiopoulos et al, 2006; Hess, 2010). Finally, the dominant school culture is deemed to be the most decisive factor in the development of attitudes towards students with intellectual disabilities by their peers.…”