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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://dspace.cityu.edu.hk/handle/2031/5095
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dc.contributor.authorHo, Fan Lung (賀繁龍)
dc.date.accessioned2008-03-17T04:43:04Z
dc.date.accessioned2017-09-19T08:25:03Z
dc.date.accessioned2019-01-22T03:29:40Z-
dc.date.available2008-03-17T04:43:04Z
dc.date.available2017-09-19T08:25:03Z
dc.date.available2019-01-22T03:29:40Z-
dc.date.issued2007
dc.identifier.otherss2007-4708-hfl962
dc.identifier.urihttp://144.214.8.231/handle/2031/5095-
dc.description.abstractObjectives. Study 1 was to explore the relationship between types of disability and their associated stereotyped expectations of communicative competence. Study 2 was to determine whether changes in stereotypical communicative competence towards persons with disabilities would affect the perception of level of patronizing speech they received by a third party. Methods. In Study 1, a survey recruited sixty-two people at the campus of City University of Hong Kong to rate the communicative competence of nine types of disability varied with cognitive orientation, visibility and context-specificity. In Study 2, forty students of City University were assigned into the two experimental conditions (Public Relations vs. Computer Science) to evaluate the level of patronizing speech received by an interactant with disability. The patronizing speech was implemented in a conversational audiotape. Results. Study 1 revealed that Schizophrenia was rated as less communicatively competent than Dyslexia, and Dyslexia less competent than Muscular Dystrophy, in terms of the cognitive orientation. In the dimensions of the visibility, Monoplegia and Amputation were rated as more competent than Quadriplegia. Epilepsy was rated as less competence than Cancer and Exercise-induced Asthma in terms of the visibility. Study 2 showed that the interactant with disability and with a context conveying his communicative competence as positive would be perceived as receiving less patronizing speech than with a context conveying his competence as negative. Discussion. Study 1 suggested that people without disability held heterogeneous and hierarchical stereotype towards the communicative competence of persons with different disabilities. Study 2 indicated that people without disability could perceive accommodations of external interability communications towards their own stereotypical expectations of communicative competence of those interactants and it might possible to change stereotypes towards people with disabilities with additional contexts.
dc.rightsThis work is protected by copyright. Reproduction or distribution of the work in any format is prohibited without written permission of the copyright owner.
dc.rightsAccess is unrestricted.
dc.subjectInterability
dc.subjectTypes of Disability
dc.subjectCommunicative competence
dc.subjectPatronizing speech
dc.subjectPeople with disabilities -- Means of communication.
dc.subjectCommunication in social work.
dc.subjectSocial workers -- Language.
dc.titleCommunicating with Types of Disability: Communicative Competence and Patronizing Speechen
dc.contributor.departmentDepartment of Applied Social Studiesen
dc.description.courseSS4708en
dc.description.programmeBSocSc Psychologyen
dc.description.supervisorProf Ng Sik Hungen
Appears in Collections:OAPS - Dept. of Social and Behavioural Sciences 

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