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العنوان
Visual-Motor Integration Abilities in a Sample of School Age
Children with Specific Learning Disorder (reading disorder)
Following Multi-Sensory Program Remediation:
المؤلف
ElFoliey, Rania El Sayed Mohamed.
هيئة الاعداد
باحث / رانيا السيد محمد الفولى
مشرف / منــــــى محمــــــود الشيــــــخ
مشرف / مــــــروة عـــادل المسيـــرى
مشرف / إيمـــان محمــــد شـــورب
تاريخ النشر
2022.
عدد الصفحات
138 P. :
اللغة
الإنجليزية
الدرجة
ماجستير
التخصص
الطب النفسي والصحة العقلية
تاريخ الإجازة
1/1/2022
مكان الإجازة
جامعة عين شمس - كلية الطب - قسم المخ والاعصاب والطب النفسي
الفهرس
Only 14 pages are availabe for public view

from 138

from 138

Abstract

Developmental dyslexia (DD) is one of the learning difficulties, especially in reading failure in accuracy, fluency and understanding that cannot be explained by problems in educational opportunity, general intelligence, general motivation, or sensory sensitivity.
In the current study we aimed to evaluate and compare visual motor abilities in a group of Specific Reading Disorder and control children, study the degree of improvement that might occur following a highly structured multisensory remediation, study and compare the socio-demographic and clinical factors in the study population for 6 weeks that might correlate with the probable improvement and detect risk factors and possible predictors that might herald improvement.
This study included 60 school-age children, age 8 to 10 with specific learning disorder. Included children were divided into 2 groups: study group and control group. Study group children were subjected to visual motor integration training for 6 weeks involving training exercises for visual perception, attention, motor coordination and VMI.
Assessment of visual motor integration, motor coordination and visual perception between the two groups revealed significant improvement in patients’ group in all scores of VMI after therapy compared to before therapy. Moreover, the applied training protocol resulted in inhibition of primitive reflexes presented by included patients at start of the study.