rehabilitation; primary health care; occupational health; mental health; child development; occupational therapy; education; vocational rehabilitation; community-based therapy
A Survey to investigate how South African Occupational Therapists in private practice are assessing and treating poor handwriting in foundation phase learners: Part One - Demographics and Assessement Practices
PDF

How to Cite

van der Merwe, J., Smit, N., & Vlok, B. (2011). A Survey to investigate how South African Occupational Therapists in private practice are assessing and treating poor handwriting in foundation phase learners: Part One - Demographics and Assessement Practices. South African Journal of Occupational Therapy, 41(3), 3–11. Retrieved from https://sajot.org.za/index.php/sajot/article/view/105

Abstract

Poor handwriting can have a myriad of negative effects on a learner’s academic performance and emotional well-being. Appropriate assessment and early remediation of handwriting difficulties are of paramount importance in minimising these effects.

 This study explored, by means of a telephonic survey, the assessment practices used by South African occupational therapists in the remediation of handwriting difficulties in Foundation Phase learners. The findings show that a wide variety of informal and formal assessment methods are used. With regards to standardised performance component assessments, the Developmental Test of Visual Motor Integration (VMI) and the Developmental Test of Visual Perception-2nd edition (DTVP-2) were the preferred assessment tools. The limited use of standardised handwriting assessments is an area of concern in the light of the importance attached to providing objective evidence of the benefit of intervention on functional skills. Use of the DTVP-2 for handwriting referrals may need to be reviewed as available research has shown no significant correlation between handwriting ability and Perceptual Quotient scores on the DTVP. 

 KEYWORDS: Assessment, Foundation Phase, Handwriting

PDF

 

All work is published under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Non-Commercial International Creative Commons (CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0) License. Under this license, authors retain the copyright of their article and agree to make articles available to users, without permission or fees, for any lawful, non-commercial purpose. Users may read, copy, or re-use published content as long as the author(s) and original place of publication are properly cited.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.