Classroom behaviors associated with difficulties in visual-motor perception

Author(s):  
Jane D. Wallbrown ◽  
Fred H. Wallbrown
1968 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 123-125
Author(s):  
G. BALDINI DEVOTO ◽  
E. CERRETELLIS

Author(s):  
Jane D. Wallbrown ◽  
Fred H. Wallbrown ◽  
Ann W. Engin

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Simone Aparecida Capellini ◽  
Larissa Sellin ◽  
Ilaria D’Angelo ◽  
Noemi Del Bianco ◽  
Catia Giaconi ◽  
...  

This studyaimed to characterize and compare the visual-motor perception and handwriting performance of students with mixed dyslexia and students with good academic performance. Twenty-six schoolchildren of both sexes participated in this study, aged 9 to 11 years and 11 months old, from fourth and fifth grades of an elementary school in municipal public schools, from an average socioeconomic level, divided into two groups: Group I (GI) composed of 13 students with a multidisciplinary diagnosis of mixed developmental dyslexia and Group II (GII) composed of 13 students with good academic performance from a municipal school and matched according to gender, education, and age to GI. All students in this study were subjected to the application of the following procedures: Developmental Test of Visual Perception III—DTVP-III, Dysgraphia Scale and writing analysis by NeuroScript MovAlyzeR 6.1 software. The results were analyzed statistically using the following tests: Mann-Whitney test, Wilcoxon signed-rank test, and Friedman test, aiming to verify intragroup and intergroup differences for the variables of interest in the DTVP-III, the Dysgraphia Scale, and the measures of handwriting speed and pressure by the MovAlyzeR software. The results were analyzed statistically at a significance level of 5% (0.050). The results showed that there were statistically significant differences between GI and GII in the parameters of the Dysgraphia Scale, floating lines, irregular spaces between words, junction points, sudden movements, and dimension irregularities. GII showed a superior performance in relation to GI in the variables analyzed with the DTVP-III in visual-motor integration, reduced motricity perception, and general visual perception. There was no statistically significant difference between GI and GII in the variables analyzed by the MovAlyzeR software. The results of this study allowed us to conclude that students with mixed dyslexia present a lower performance profile than the students with good academic performance in general visual perception, reduced motricity visual perception, and visual-motor perception skills, which may be the cause of the quality of dysgraphic writing characterized by floating lines, irregular spaces, junction points, sudden movements, and dimension irregularities.


2017 ◽  
Vol 5 (11) ◽  
pp. 13 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ahmet Bildiren

The objective of the study was to test the Coloured Progressive Matrices Test with regard to reliability and validity for the 3-9 age sample group because of the lack of diagnostic tools for the pre-school period. The sample group of the study was comprised of a total of 925 children with 433 girls (46.8%) and 492 boys (53.2%). Coloured Progressive Matrices Test reliability was analyzed by way of two split-half reliability and test-re-test reliability using Kuder Richardson-20 (KR-20) and Spearman-Brown Formula. The level of relationship between Coloured Progressive Matrices Test and Bender-Gestalt Visual Motor Perception Test and TONI-3 tests was determined via Pearson Product Moment formula for validity analyses. Afterwards, the age norms were determined as percentile values in accordance with the ages. The results obtained from the study provided psychometric data indicating that the Coloured Progressive Matrices Test is suited for the use by researchers.


1977 ◽  
Vol 45 (3) ◽  
pp. 981-982 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mary Jane Brown

The Developmental Test of Visual-motor Integration (Beery) and the Bender-Gestalt test (Bender) were administered to 44 second-grade children. Developmental age scores (Koppitz scoring) and age equivalents (Beery) were compared. The correlation of .43 between Bender (Koppitz scoring) and Beery scores was moderate but statistically significant. A t test for dependent groups indicated a significant difference between the means on the Bender and Beery tests. These results confirm that neither test should be utilized as the sole indicator of visual-motor perception.


1974 ◽  
Vol 38 (1) ◽  
pp. 51-59 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert T. Snyder ◽  
Peggy Pope Snyder

An item analysis of Bender-Gestalt error items, as measured by the Koppitz scoring system, was conducted with protocols of 541 children in Grades 2 to 5, selected as being representative of each age level therein, i.e., 7 to 11. The frequencies of each of the 30 possible Koppitz errors at each age level were examined for males, females, and a combined category, in an attempt to identify maturational changes in visual-motor perception. Data from a similarly conducted study with 6-yr.-old first graders are integrated with present findings as many problems in visual perceptual tasks for 6-yr.-olds had been alleviated considerably by age 7. Error items which tend to discriminate over age are identified, as are those items which do not discriminate beyond certain ages. Comparisons by sex were largely nonsignificant.


2019 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 33-40
Author(s):  
Pedram Pazhohesh ◽  
Rokhsareh Badami ◽  
Maryam Nezakat-Alhosseini ◽  
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