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Título
School participation of students with disabilities in Spain: profile, supports and barriers
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Child
Disability
School participation
Environment
Barriers
Supports
Clasificación UNESCO
6111 Personalidad
6102 Psicología del Niño y del Adolescente
6105.01 Psicología Diferencial
6103.03 Asesoramiento y Orientación Educacional
Fecha de publicación
2026-03-26
Editor
Frontiers
Citación
Gómez-Vela M, González Ortega E, Orgaz Baz MB and Vicario-Molina I (2026) School participation of students with disabilities in Spain: profile, supports and barriers. Front. Psychiatry 17:1783581. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2026.1783581
Resumen
Introduction: School participation is central to learning, development, and
inclusion. Within international efforts to identify environmental barriers to
participation, this study aimed to analyze the school participation profile of
students aged 5–17 years in Spain—with and without disabilities and other
special educational needs (SEN)—and to identify environmental factors that
support or hinder their participation.
Method: Parents of 415 Spanish students aged 5–17 years completed the Spanish
version of the Participation and Environment Measure for Children and Youth:
PEM-CY. Group differences between children with (n=142) and without (n=273)
disabilities were tested.
Results: Students with disabilities/SEN participated less often and with lower
involvement across all school activities, with significant differences in “Classroom
activities” and “Getting together with peers outside of class.” Parents of children
with disabilities reported that cognitive, behavioral, and social demands
commonly hinder participation. Reported resource unavailability ranged from
10%–38% (adapted transportation, financial resources, information, technical/
communication aids, and support services tailored to students’ needs and
interests). Conversely, 44.4%–72.8% of parents indicated that physical layout,
sensory qualities, safety conditions, staff attitudes, and peer relationships usually
supported participation.
Discussion: Despite inclusive-education mandates, findings indicate persistent
participation and engagement inequities for students with disabilities and other
special needs in Spanish schools. Parents point to environmental conditions—
support services tailored to students’ needs and interests, teacher training to
individualize these supports, and a culture of collaboration among teachers and
between teachers, families, and children with special needs themselves—as key
elements in ensuring meaningful, equitable, and full participation in school life.
URI
DOI
10.3389/fpsyt.2026.1783581
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Patrocinador
Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades













