1993
DOI: 10.1080/01490409309513193
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Correlates of self‐reported leisure among adults with mental retardation

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Cited by 6 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…A number of authors have argued that inclusive leisure provides numerous benefits for individuals with a disability or those otherwise marginalized, that includes: becoming more independent, becoming a leader, having fun, being able to compete, learning new skills, exercising, getting away 10 Leisure/Loisir, Vol. 28 (200312004) from parents and caretakers, confronting fears, and developing a life-long interest, to name but a few (Harmer & Bakheit, 1999;Hawkins & Freeman, 1993;Kennedy, Austin, & Smith, 1987;Lockwood & Lockwood, 1997;Mahon et al, 2000;Schleien, Ray, & Green, 1997). For many individuals, inclusive leisure involvement provides ".…”
Section: Benefits To Individuals With a Disability Or Otherwise Margimentioning
confidence: 95%
“…A number of authors have argued that inclusive leisure provides numerous benefits for individuals with a disability or those otherwise marginalized, that includes: becoming more independent, becoming a leader, having fun, being able to compete, learning new skills, exercising, getting away 10 Leisure/Loisir, Vol. 28 (200312004) from parents and caretakers, confronting fears, and developing a life-long interest, to name but a few (Harmer & Bakheit, 1999;Hawkins & Freeman, 1993;Kennedy, Austin, & Smith, 1987;Lockwood & Lockwood, 1997;Mahon et al, 2000;Schleien, Ray, & Green, 1997). For many individuals, inclusive leisure involvement provides ".…”
Section: Benefits To Individuals With a Disability Or Otherwise Margimentioning
confidence: 95%
“…This study grew out of an existing longitudinal study of ageing-related change in older adults with intellectual disability by Hawkins and her associates (Hawkins 1993a, b;Hawkins & Freeman 1993;Hawkins & Eklund 1994;Hawkins et al 1995;May et al 1995). The first 4 years of this longitudinal study produced findings based largely on quantitative measurement of a wide range of variables associated with physical, cognitive and psychosocial functioning.…”
Section: Research Questionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…En relación a la falta de tiempo, Buttimer y Tierney (2005) destacan que los participantes con DI en su estudio identificaron que el "no tener suficiente tiempo" es una barrera para participar en actividades de ocio. Probablemente, aquellas personas que perciban como barrera el "no disponer de tiempo" para realizar actividades estén indicando que son dependientes de sus padres o de otros familiares o de los profesionales, ya que son estos los que organizan y planifican las actividades para ellos (Hawkins y Freeman, 1993;Zijlstra y Vlaskamp, 2005).…”
Section: Discussionunclassified
“…Así, por ejemplo, una persona puede hacer distintas actividades de ocio pero mostrar una preferencia por algunas de ellas. Y por otro lado, una persona podría estar interesada en realizar determinadas actividades pero puede que no participe debido a barreras internas o externas (Hawkins y Freeman, 1993;Hawkins, Peng, Hsieh, y Eklund, 1999).…”
Section: Objetivos E Hipótesisunclassified