مهارات حماية الذات من الإساءة الجنسية لدى عينة من المعاقين عقليا القابلين للتعلم : دراسة مقارنة بين الجنسين
The aim of the research is to uncover the differences between (males and females) educable intellectual disability in the skills of self-protection from sexual abuse, and the research sample consisted of (40) students with educable intellectual disability, which consisted of (20) male of educable intellectual disability and (20) female of educable intellectual disability from the School of Intellectual Education in Benha, whose ages ranged between (18- 12) years old, with an average age (14.550) and a standard deviation (1.3562), and the measure of self-protection skills from sexual abuse prepared by the researcher was used, and the wording of some phrases was modified to suit the application on the sample of the male with educable intellectual disability as well as female with educable intellectual disability. The researcher also used appropriate statistical methods to arrive at the results of the study, where the t-test -test)) for independent samples through the SPSS program, and the results of the study revealed that there is no statistically significant difference between the mean scores of male and female with educable intellectual disability on the scale of self-protection skills. The results show about scale dimension: 1) There is a statistically significant difference, at 0.05 level between the mean scores of males and females in the second-dimension physiological changes identification skill in the direction of females. 2) There is a statistically significant difference, at 0.01 level between the mean scores of males and females in the fifth dimension the identification skill of self - protection strategies, in the direction of females. 3) There is no statistically significant difference between mean scores of males and females in the rest of scale dimension. 4) There is a statistically significant difference, at 0.01 level between. 5) The mean scores of males and females in the scale of self - protection skills as whole, among persons with disabilities, in the direction of females. (Published abstract)