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Parental perceptions of early childhood education programming for children with and without disabilities

Posted on:2015-06-15Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:The University of Southern MississippiCandidate:Herrington, Brittany GreerFull Text:PDF
GTID:1477390020452049Subject:Education
Abstract/Summary:
This study examined the factors influencing parental selection of early childhood education programs for their children with and without disabilities. Factors explored were severity of disability, parental choice in programming, inclusion, parental satisfaction, type of disability, and availability of programs that take part in early childhood education. Parents with at least one child with a disability and one child without a disability age eight or younger participated in this study by responding to items from a researcher-adapted instrument. Though no findings were statistically significant, conclusions drawn both support the literature and suggest that parents want the same programming for their children, regardless of disability. Implications are described for early childhood education providers, parents, and higher education personnel. Future research concepts, including specific attention to geography, are recommended.
Keywords/Search Tags:Early childhood education, Parental, Children with and without disabilities, Programming
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