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Handwriting Difficulties in Primary School Children: A Search for Underlying Mechanisms

283

Citations

32

References

2006

Year

TLDR

This study investigated how perceptual‑motor dysfunction and cognitive planning problems affect handwriting quality or speed in children with handwriting problems. Twenty‑nine children with handwriting problems and twenty classroom peers in grades 2–3 were assessed on visual perception, visual‑motor integration, fine‑motor coordination, and cognitive planning. Children with handwriting problems performed significantly worse on visual perception, visual‑motor integration, fine‑motor coordination, and cognitive planning, and regression analysis revealed that visual‑motor integration uniquely predicted handwriting quality in the HWP group while fine‑motor coordination predicted quality in controls, indicating distinct mechanisms for each group. The abstract is structured with sections: OBJECTIVE, METHOD, RESULTS, and CONCLUSIONS.

Abstract

Abstract OBJECTIVE. This study investigated the contribution of perceptual-motor dysfunction and cognitive planning problems to the quality or speed of handwriting in children with handwriting problems (HWP). METHOD. Twenty-nine children with HWP and 20 classroom peers attending regular schools (grade 2 and grade 3) were tested with regard to visual perception, visual-motor integration, fine motor coordination, and cognitive planning abilities. RESULTS. The HWP group scored significantly lower on visual perception, visual-motor integration, fine motor coordination, and cognitive planning in comparison with classroom controls. Regression analyses showed that visual-motor integration was the only significant predictor for quality of handwriting in the HWP group, whereas fine motor coordination (i.e., unimanual dexterity) was the only significant predictor of quality of handwriting in the control group. CONCLUSIONS. Results suggest that two different mechanisms underlie the quality of handwriting in children with and without handwriting problems. Poor quality of handwriting of children with HWP seems particularly related to a deficiency in visual-motor integration.

References

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