Identification of movement coordination deficiencies in Singapore primary school children

PURPOSE This study aimed to identify children with movement coordination deficiencies to understand the current prevalence of such deficiencies in Singapore children. A severe form of this deficiency is known as Developmental Coordination Disorder (DCD). Movement assessment tools provide a less cos...

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Main Author: Toh, Jun Hong
Other Authors: Chow Jia Yi
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2016
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/66598
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-665982020-09-27T20:25:39Z Identification of movement coordination deficiencies in Singapore primary school children Toh, Jun Hong Chow Jia Yi Teo-Koh Sock Miang National Institute of Education DRNTU::Science PURPOSE This study aimed to identify children with movement coordination deficiencies to understand the current prevalence of such deficiencies in Singapore children. A severe form of this deficiency is known as Developmental Coordination Disorder (DCD). Movement assessment tools provide a less costly and more convenient method, compared to official diagnoses, in understanding children’s movement coordination abilities. METHODS 26 Primary 2 children, 13 males and 13 females, aged 7-8 from a Singapore school were recruited for this study. They underwent an object control skills assessment via the Test of Gross Motor Development 2nd Edition (TGMD-2). The skills were assessed by 2 qualified assessors, who underwent inter- and intra-rater reliability testing before the assessment. A checklist with the 3 main developmental stages for each skill, namely Initial, Transition, and Mature, was used with the TGMD-2’s skill criteria placed under the Mature stage. Participants also completed a form giving information on height, weight, family background and level of physical activity (PA) outside school. RESULTS 16 participants (6 male, 10 female) fell in the <1 percentile. There was a correlation between PA participation outside school and skill performance, but not between BMI and skill performance. CONCLUSION The high prevalence of Singapore primary school children with movement coordination deficiencies, or at risk of DCD, is of concern especially to parents and teachers. Future studies could include larger sample sizes, and/or participants from different age groups, to determine whether the results can be generalised to the Singapore population and whether intervention would be necessary. Bachelor of Science (Sport Science and Management) 2016-04-18T08:34:13Z 2016-04-18T08:34:13Z 2016 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/66598 en 50 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Science
spellingShingle DRNTU::Science
Toh, Jun Hong
Identification of movement coordination deficiencies in Singapore primary school children
description PURPOSE This study aimed to identify children with movement coordination deficiencies to understand the current prevalence of such deficiencies in Singapore children. A severe form of this deficiency is known as Developmental Coordination Disorder (DCD). Movement assessment tools provide a less costly and more convenient method, compared to official diagnoses, in understanding children’s movement coordination abilities. METHODS 26 Primary 2 children, 13 males and 13 females, aged 7-8 from a Singapore school were recruited for this study. They underwent an object control skills assessment via the Test of Gross Motor Development 2nd Edition (TGMD-2). The skills were assessed by 2 qualified assessors, who underwent inter- and intra-rater reliability testing before the assessment. A checklist with the 3 main developmental stages for each skill, namely Initial, Transition, and Mature, was used with the TGMD-2’s skill criteria placed under the Mature stage. Participants also completed a form giving information on height, weight, family background and level of physical activity (PA) outside school. RESULTS 16 participants (6 male, 10 female) fell in the <1 percentile. There was a correlation between PA participation outside school and skill performance, but not between BMI and skill performance. CONCLUSION The high prevalence of Singapore primary school children with movement coordination deficiencies, or at risk of DCD, is of concern especially to parents and teachers. Future studies could include larger sample sizes, and/or participants from different age groups, to determine whether the results can be generalised to the Singapore population and whether intervention would be necessary.
author2 Chow Jia Yi
author_facet Chow Jia Yi
Toh, Jun Hong
format Final Year Project
author Toh, Jun Hong
author_sort Toh, Jun Hong
title Identification of movement coordination deficiencies in Singapore primary school children
title_short Identification of movement coordination deficiencies in Singapore primary school children
title_full Identification of movement coordination deficiencies in Singapore primary school children
title_fullStr Identification of movement coordination deficiencies in Singapore primary school children
title_full_unstemmed Identification of movement coordination deficiencies in Singapore primary school children
title_sort identification of movement coordination deficiencies in singapore primary school children
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/66598
_version_ 1681059272031469568