156 ’Cycle-IN’ Student facilitated cycle skills training for children with intellectual and developmental disabilities: An applied case study
Erin Byrd, Gary McDermott, Laurence Taggart, Clare McMonagle

TL;DR
A student-led cycling program helped children with intellectual and developmental disabilities improve their cycling skills and confidence.
Contribution
The Cycle-IN program offers a novel interdisciplinary approach to motor skill development and student professional training for children with disabilities.
Findings
High attendance rates (83.3% for children and 84.2% for student volunteers) indicate program acceptability.
Participants showed a 42.6% average improvement in cycle skills and achieved 61.6% of basic cycling skills.
Qualitative insights identified program challenges, sustainability needs, and recommendations for scalability.
Abstract
In an effort to address the discrepancies in opportunities for children and young people with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD) to develop fundamental skills and confidence riding a bicycle, a 12-week collaborative interdisciplinary student-led cycling programme ‘Cycle-IN’ was developed by Ulster University Faculty of Life and Health Sciences and Foyle Down Syndrome Trust. Framed within interpretive phenomenology, and drawing upon interviews conducted with the young cyclists, student facilitators, organisation staff and parents, this case study explores the lived experiences of the Cycle-IN programme and evaluates whether the programme is in fact assisting children with IDD (n = 10) to become more confident cyclists, and supporting the professional development of sport and health science student’s (n = 11) competence and confidence to work with children with additional…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEducational and Psychological Assessments
