As stated earlier, adapted physical activity includes many movement opportunities for individuals with disabilities, including adult recreational activities, familybased home programming, and even elite disability sport options. Given the pervasive nature of sport in the world, it is fitting that the concepts outlined earlier about physical education and adapted physical education have their roots in sport. Since the early Olympic Games, sports and related physical activities as leisure pursuits have permeated society. The same is true for early movement opportunities for individuals with disabilities as more therapy-based programming led to competitive wheelchair games.This was initially the result of work done with many of the individuals around the world who returned from World War II with permanent physical disabilities. As these early movement opportunities developed, it was recognized that movement is enhanced by competitive play rather than training to alleviate disability.
The earliest sporting experiences for individuals with disabilities included the Stoke Mandeville Games in England. These and many postwar programs in the United States and abroad came in recognition of the value of sport and play as not only therapy for the body but also as vital to the human spirit. Since these earlier games, Special Olympics programs (outcomes of the 1965 task force on recreation for persons with mental retardation) and more recent Paralympic events have become mainstays in the broader sporting world, with the last growing in popularity and featuring outstanding athletic accomplishments as individuals with disabilities utilize advances in technology and training practices.
Adapted physical activity and specifically the sport participation of individuals with disabilities occur on a continuum. Joseph Winnick created one of the earlier and still relevant models outlining the potential sportrelated options for persons with disabilities. His model includes regular sports with no modifications. As an example, Olympic athlete Oliver Halazy participated in an elite international athletic event alongside persons without disabilities and won an Olympic gold medal as part of the 1936 Hungarian water polo team. Next on the continuum, are regular sports with accommodations, such as judo, where a judoka with a visual impairment needs rule modifications that allow for integrated competition. For example, this would include rules requiring a grip must be maintained at all times during standing portions of the sport. The idea is to equate play and not allow rule changes to alter the nature of the sport for participants. In the judo example, a visually impaired judoka would be at a disadvantage if a sighted opponent was not in physical contact, whereas maintaining a grip does not give one player an advantage over the other and still allows for a full range of throws to occur. This may alter strategy in play, but does not change the sport.
The issue of what changes the nature of participation or even creates an advantage for the person with a disability in integrated play between individuals with and without disabilities is covered by the Americans with Disabilities Act in the United States, and by other international sporting organizations. More recently, the court case of the golfer Casey Martin wanting to use a golf cart for Professional Golf Association (PGA) tour events in the United States illustrates this issue. In regular sports that make accommodations, not all changes to play are allowable, and each of these issues—such as a judoka requiring a basic rule change or a golfer requesting additional equipment (not available to all)—is handled on a case-by-case basis. The goal is to maintain the integrity of the sport involved while trying to afford equal opportunities to persons with disabilities. Segregated sporting events are believed by many to not only be necessary for some individuals with disabilities, but their right. Winnick’s classifications include a level of participation with events for the general population and persons with disabilities that occur at the same time, but do not involve direct competition between persons with and without disabilities. As in the Boston marathon, racers compete at the same time but within their locomotion category. This practice leads to an important debate in adapted physical activity related to who should participate in, for example, wheelchair races. Is it acceptable for a person with no or minimal disability to choose a wheelchair division over a bipedal competition? (This debate goes beyond the scope of the current paper and the reader is referred to Hans Lindstrom’s 1992 work on the topic.)
Finally, there is the more traditional format of segregated sport in which based on predetermined criteria only individuals with disabilities compete in events and at times separate from individuals without disabilities. Take, for example, wheelchair basketball. Athletes who want to participate in Wheelchair USA basketball events are evaluated and, based on level and nature of limitations, are ranked and scored for equitable play. For example, a class I participant would be scored one point whereas a higher-functioning class III participant would be scored three points. A team can have a total of eleven points on the floor at a time. These scores equate play and ensure that participants of all levels are valued and that disability sport participation is maintained for individuals with disabilities. Other governing bodies may have similar grouping criteria aimed at creating fair play within a group of individuals who have similar disabilities.
What is important to note is that as society in general accepts athletes who participate in modified games or sports that can parallel more general events, such as judo or swimming, or even those who participate in more specialized events, such as goal ball or wheelchair races, disability sport has become a product worth selling. The same is true of all sport in society and this development marks a level of “arrival” or acceptance of persons with disabilities. Studies show that the marketing side of disability sport is on the rise and that products related to play are part of the endorsement deals, resulting in gains by companies in many areas that go beyond product sells and immediate profit. Today, the company that makes the fastest prosthetic limb is on par with golfing supply companies that make the drivers professionals use to hit the longest shots. This satisfies important corporate goals: Sport becomes an avenue of profits for companies producing superior products; in addition, “accepting” diversity enhances the corporate image. Finally, in society there is an overall understanding that sport excellence in any form has been and always will be valued. Media exposure and general acknowledgment by members of society that athletic abilities come in any type of body, even those that may on the surface appear different, is a sign of the times.
The significance of sports exposure as it relates to media coverage and product sales is an indicator of progress in the struggle for acceptance by individuals with disabilities. Claudine Sherrill, a leader in the adapted physical activity community, highlights the dichotomy of disability viewed as a form of diversity rather than less able. High-level competitive sport that accents the essence of human spirit helps others view the runner without sight, for example, as able rather than disabled. Today, it is clear that advances in training, technology, and general attitude make it likely that males and females, with and without disabilities, runners and those propelling themselves in a wheelchair, will reach the highest levels of athletic achievement. Programming that helps school-age children become more athletically proficient and interested in physical activity in general (as is the case for adapted programs for some children) feeds community programs whose participants vie for success similar to that of their counterparts without disabilities. In some cases elite athletes with disabilities emerge to compete for their countries at the highest Olympic and world levels.