Using concept maps in cognitive treatment for children with developmental coordination disorder
Tsameret Ricon
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DOI: 10.4236/health.2010.27104   PDF    HTML     5,257 Downloads   10,884 Views   Citations

Abstract

Children with Developmental Coordination Disorder (DCD) often seem to possess a narrow repertoire of cognitive strategies. In particular, they have difficulties in learning and internalizing the rules and strategies that other people intuitively use to approach common everyday problems. As a result, they often appear to have organizational, planning, memory and learning difficulties. The article proposes using a Concept Map (CM) as a visual strategy to facilitate interaction between a child with DCD, his/her family and therapist, as reflected in Client Centred and cognitive approaches. The CM is used as a method of assisting the child to identify, develop and utilize cognitive strategies in order to manage daily tasks effectively, as a tool in organizing his own therapy and in order to encourage participation. A demonstration of the concept mapping usefulness is brought by a case report. Further uses of concept mapping as a useful strategy within the framework of intervention remain to be studied.

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Ricon, T. (2010) Using concept maps in cognitive treatment for children with developmental coordination disorder. Health, 2, 685-691. doi: 10.4236/health.2010.27104.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

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