Routledge Handbook of Qualitative Methods for Researching Disability in Physical Education

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Action research
advanced disability research methods
Appreciative inquiry
Arts-based enquiry
axiological
Category=GPS
Category=JNSC
Category=SCGF
Category=SCL
child agency studies
conceptual
Critical-ableist perspectives
data
Dignity
Disability
disabled children
disabled young people
Discourse analysis
emancipatory research
Epistemological
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
eq_sports-fitness
Ethics
Ethnography
Grounded theory
inclusive education research
intersectional analysis
Intersectionality
Life histories
myths
Narrative inquiry
New materialism
Non-disabled researchers
ontological
participatory methodologies
Participatory research
PE
Phenomenological inquiry
Physical Education
Play-based approaches
Post humanism
qualitative data representation
Qualitative Methods
Reflexive thematic analysis
representing disability
researching disability
Sensory methods
sensory-based inquiry
Severely-able perspectives
Theoretical

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032591018
  • Weight: 1040g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 23 Jan 2026
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This is the first book to introduce qualitative research methods in the study of disability and physical education. It outlines key concepts and theories in disability and physical education, providing a platform for understanding, before exploring the full range of methodologies and techniques for research, data gathering, and data representation. Written by a team of leading researchers from around the world, every chapter introduces a research theory, approach, method, or tool; provides a critical discussion about how that theory, approach method, or tool has been used or might be used; and offers signposts to future directions for research in that area.

This book explores established research methods and cutting‑edge methods that are being applied to disability and physical education for the first time, from narrative inquiry, ethnography, and action research, to creative nonfiction, sensory methods, and participatory approaches. This book places an emphasis on approaches that consider disabled children and young people as active (rather than passive) agents involved in data gathering, and on ways in which researchers and research participants can utilise data to best represent views toward, and experiences of, disability and physical education.

This is an essential reference volume for any advanced student, researcher, pre-service educator, in‑service educator, or coach with an interest in disability and physical education.

Anthony J. Maher is the Director of Research and Professor of Special Educational Needs, Disability and Inclusion in the Carnegie School of Education at Leeds Beckett University, UK. His research is sociological, philosophical, and psychological in nature, using participatory, life history, (auto)ethnographical, and narrative approaches.

Justin A. Haegele is the Colgate Darden Endowed Professor and the Director of the Center for Movement, Health, & Disability in the Department of Human Movement Studies & Special Education at Old Dominion University, US. He is the Immediate Past President of the North American Federation of Adapted Physical Activity, and the Editor-in-Chief for the peer-reviewed publication Adapted Physical Activity Quarterly.

Janine Coates is a Reader in Equity and Inclusion in Physical Activity and Sport at Loughborough University, UK. She also serves as Associate Editor for the peer‑reviewed journal Adapted Physical Activity Quarterly.