“It represents her in play” Parental Views on Commercial Toys that Represent Disability
Citation
Ali, L. and Jones, S.E. (2024) ‘“It represents her in play” parental and child views on toys that represent disability’, Equity in Education & Society, p. 27526461241235942. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1177/27526461241235942.
Abstract
Toys representing disability are now commercially available, yet there
has been limited exploration of parental perspectives on these toys. This
study explored parents’ and carers’ views of toys that represented
disability through a pre-registered online survey of N = 83 parents of
children aged between 0 and 14 years old. In a repeated measures
design, parents viewed images of commercially available toys. We
measured their child’s previous direct contact with a disabled person,
their perceived likelihood that their child would enjoy playing with that
toy, and parents’ open-ended views on why they thought their child
would or would not enjoy that toy. We found that significantly more
parents of older disabled children and younger non-disabled children
thought their child would choose to play with representative dolls. Open ended responses indicated that this finding may have occurred because
parents of disabled children (vs. non-disabled children) valued the
representation afforded by the toys. In this way, we show that parents
value representation and accessibility particularly when they are a parent
of a disabled child themselves. Our study highlights when parents may
bring disability-representative toys into the toy box in ways that promote
inclusion.