Women Living In Group Homes Need To Learn To Make Decisions About Leisure Time To Enrich Their Lives

Most people dont think twice about the ability to choose the movie they want to watch, the book they want to read or with whom they will have coffee. But what if you didnt have the choice, or were never taught how to make decisions regarding leisure activities? Thats the reality for some women living in group homes according to a new study from the University of Alberta.

Brenda RossowKimball, who did postgraduate research with Donna Goodwin, in the Faculty of Physical Education and Recreation, investigated the leisure experiences of five women with intellectual disabilities in two group homes. They found major differences in how leisure was experienced in each group home. In one, the women were provided with support and encouraged to make their own decisions about how they used their leisure time; there was a genuine interest in the women engaging in independent spontaneous leisure, according to RossowKimball. In the other home leisure was supervised by the staff, scheduled into the activities of the home, and managed by the staff, which, the researchers say, doesnt teach the women how to discover what they like to do for leisure.

The stark contrast of selfdirected leisure against staffdirected leisure time concerned both researchers because the women in the study are approaching retirement and will soon have a lot of free time on their hands.

“If we dont provide people with the opportunity to experience choice and to learn leisure skills, their longawaited retirement time could be quite empty,” said Goodwin.

The findings are published in Adapted Physical Activity Quarterly.

Notes
Quinn Phillips

This entry was posted on Jueves, Septiembre 24th, 2009 at 19:00 and is filed under womens health. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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