Parental perceptions of risks with young adults who have severe learning difficulties contrasted with the young people’s views and experiences.
Online Access
http://uir.ulster.ac.uk/18365/Abstract
The majority of school-leavers over two years from two special schools for pupils with severe learning disabilities were individually interviewed (N=34), as were their parents (N=38). Parental reports stressed the amount of care and supervision required by these young people. They viewed them as vulnerable to various different hazards such as crossing roads and only a minority are prepared to take the risk of teaching them. However more of the young people felt they were capable of certain tasks. Parents had a particular fear that their son or daughter may be taken advantage of sexually even though the bigger risk - going by the young people’s reports - is verbal abuse and bullying from peers. A model is proposed of the influences on parental assessments of risks. This might be used in arriving at ‘shared risk-taking’ strategies with professionals and the young people during the later years of schoolingDate
2003-07-01Type
Journal articleIdentifier
oai:uir.ulster.ac.uk:18365McConkey, Roy and Smyth, Marisa (2003) Parental perceptions of risks with young adults who have severe learning difficulties contrasted with the young people’s views and experiences. Children and Society, 17 . pp. 18-31. [Journal article]