The Effects of Integrated Step Training into the Physical Education Curriculum of Children with Intellectual Disabilities
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design and Procedure
2.2. Data Collection
2.3. Extraction of Moving Participant Images from Video
2.4. Estimation of Participant Centroids from Extracted Images
2.5. Statistical Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Effects on Movement Posture during Stepping
3.2. Effects on Standing Posture
3.3. Effects on the Performance of Daily Activities
“The students’ overall performance of daily activities has improved, and they are more focused and confident in their course work than before.”---------T1
“The students are less tired, and their daily activities are completed more efficiently.”---------T2
“The students have become more enthusiastic, and interaction among them has increased.”---------T3
“I feel that the students are more attentive in class, and they are more energetic than before.”---------T4
“During class, I heard S7 speak of losing weight, and I felt that S7 has become more confident.”---------T5
“The students’ movements have quickened and their performance of daily activities has improved greatly. S8 and S5 have become more confident.”---------T6
“The students’ walking ability has improved and their movement speed has quickened.”---------T1
“The students are less short of breath and faster when they ascend or descend the stairs, which is an improvement.”---------T2
“The students can move more flexibly, and their walking ability has improved after the step training.”---------T3
“Yes, there has been an improvement in walking ability over the weeks of this semester.”---------T4
“An overall improvement in action capability is noticeable.”---------T5
“I feel that the walking ability of S8 has slightly improved.”---------T6
“S8 spoke of being able to walk confidently and of a desire to take physical education classes.”Teacher’s Diary
“In the past, the students were less active in terms of class participation, but recently I found that students are very active in participating and assisting one another.”---------T1
“The students used to like to take the elevator, but now they can take the stairs by themselves and they walk very well.”---------T2
“A few students are brave enough to express their ideas in class, speak louder, and move faster.”---------T4
“S6 volunteered to help the teacher hand in something at the end of class, and spoke of being able to walk up the stairs from the first to the third floors without tiring, which impressed me greatly.”---------T6
“S7 spoke of being unafraid of joining the step training and wishing to participate in a stepping competition.”Teacher’s Diary
“Previously, when asked about the sporting competition, the students were hesitant to participate in it, but recently, I found that the students are willing to participate.”---------T1
“The students’ faces glow like never before when they win awards.”---------T2
“The spontaneous performance of the students during the sport competition was very impressive.”---------T3
“I heard S2 say, ‘I’ve already won 11 medals; I want to get the gold medal, so I’ll do my best in the competition.’”---------T5
“In the past, the students barely interacted with one another in the vocational classes, but recently I have noticed an increase in such interactions.”---------T1
“S10 has more conversations with classmates and shows greater initiative in communicating with classmates.”---------T2
“Yes, the interaction between the students has increased, and the class atmosphere is lively, for example, S1 speaks louder and will take the initiative to talk to classmates.”---------T3
“S5 is more active in speaking and will actively call out to classmates.”---------T4
“It is the same as usual; I do not notice any change.”---------T5
“The students chat and joke with each other, interaction has increased, and peers get along well.”---------T6
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Gener | Age (Years) | Disability Level | Mobility | |
---|---|---|---|---|
S1 | M | 18 | Moderate | Physically weak, able to walk and ascend and descend stairs unaided. |
S2 | M | 19 | Mild | Good physical performance, good coordination, and able to walk fast and ascend and descend the stairs. |
S3 | M | 18 | Mild | Physical performance is fair, can walk alone and ascend and descend the stairs, but body movements are slightly stiff and uncoordinated. |
S4 | M | 18 | Moderate | Weak physical ability, can walk alone and ascend and descend the stairs, but exhibiting uncoordinated body movements. |
S5 | M | 18 | Heavy | Physical performance is fair, can walk alone, must hold the handrail to ascend and descend the stairs, uncoordinated body movements. |
S6 | M | 18 | Moderate | Physical performance is slightly weak, with the ability to walk and ascend and descend the stairs, but the body movements appear stiff and uncoordinated. |
S7 | F | 18 | Mild | Physical performance is weak, can walk and ascend and descend the stairs, but body movements are stiff and poorly coordinated. |
S8 | F | 19 | Moderate | Physical performance is fair, with the ability to walk, and the need to adhere to the handrail when going up and down the stairs, with slightly stiff body movements and lack of coordination. |
S9 | F | 19 | Moderate | Fair physical performance, good physical coordination, good walking ability, and ability to ascend and descend the stairs. |
S10 | F | 18 | Moderate | Body type is obese, and physical performance is obviously weaker, with the ability to walk. Can ascend and descend the stairs alone, but coordination of movement is lacking. |
Standing Posture Changes | ||
---|---|---|
Before | After | |
S1 | During the pretraining period, the body leaned backward indicating incoordination, with stiff hands, shoulder shrugging, and a stiff and crooked standing posture. | After training, the standing posture was straight and anxious movements such as shoulder shrugging and stiffness were absent. |
S3 | Initially, tension caused hand incoordination (ectropion) and inability to bring the feet together, resulting in a tilted body. | After training, the hands were relaxed, the hands hung down naturally, the feet were together, and an upright standing posture was adopted. |
S5 | In the first week, the standing posture appeared stiff, with rubbing and straining of the hands, and an anxious appearance. | With regular weekly training, the standing posture gradually improved, and by week 7, a straight standing posture could be adopted without any appearance of anxiousness (e.g., rubbing hands). |
S6 | Elbows were bent and knees bent slightly in the pretraining period, with body tilted to the right in the standing position. | After regular weekly training, the knees were straight, the shoulder and neck muscles were relaxed, and the standing posture was no longer skewed. |
S8 | Initially, the feet could not be brought together, hands clutched at the pants because of anxiety, and the hands could not remain at the thighs. | At the end of training, the feet could be placed together and the hands hung down naturally. |
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Wu, P.-F.; Chang, Y.-W.; Chen, T.-B.; Chang, L.-C. The Effects of Integrated Step Training into the Physical Education Curriculum of Children with Intellectual Disabilities. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 11340. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182111340
Wu P-F, Chang Y-W, Chen T-B, Chang L-C. The Effects of Integrated Step Training into the Physical Education Curriculum of Children with Intellectual Disabilities. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(21):11340. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182111340
Chicago/Turabian StyleWu, Pei-Fung, Yu-Wei Chang, Tai-Been Chen, and Li-Ching Chang. 2021. "The Effects of Integrated Step Training into the Physical Education Curriculum of Children with Intellectual Disabilities" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 21: 11340. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182111340
APA StyleWu, P. -F., Chang, Y. -W., Chen, T. -B., & Chang, L. -C. (2021). The Effects of Integrated Step Training into the Physical Education Curriculum of Children with Intellectual Disabilities. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(21), 11340. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182111340