OTJR: Online Advanced Release
OTJR: Current Issue
OTJR: Back Issues
 
OTJR: Occupation, Participation and Health
 
OTJR: About the Journal
OTJR: Submit a Manuscript
OTJR: Advertising Info
OTJR: Article Reprints
OTJR: Contact Us
Buy a Book
Terms and Conditions
e-contents - Sign up today
Subscribe to OTJR!
AOTF: The American Occupational Therapy Foundation
    

Interventions, Effects, and Outcomes in Occupational Therapy: Adults and Older Adults


Online Advanced Release
Personal Projects of Boys With Developmental Coordination Disorder

OTJR: Occupation, Participation and Health

By Anne A. Poulsen, PhD, BOccThy (Hons); Fiona M. Barker, BOccThy (Hons); Jenny Ziviani, PhD, MEd, BAppSc (OccThy)

Share/Save/Bookmark


Submitted 2/1/10; Accepted 5/15/10; Posted 7/27/10

Understanding the leisure perspectives of preadolescent boys with developmental coordination disorder (DCD) requires more than documenting time-use patterns. This study to explored the use of the Personal Projects Analysis for Children (PPA-C) to improve depth of understanding about personally meaningful leisure participation for this population. Sixty boys with DCD and 113 boys without DCD completed the PPA-C. Boys with DCD reported significantly fewer personal projects involving physical activities; fewer friends with whom to complete personal projects; more solitary leisure projects; and fewer personally meaningful personal projects in total than the comparison group. The PPA-C findings provided ecologically sensitive and personally salient information about leisure time participation from the perspectives of boys with and without DCD. The low frequency of self-reported social and physical activity personal projects for boys with DCD has not been previously detailed in this way. Occupational therapists are challenged to be vigilant regarding restricted leisure portfolios and expectations about activity participation in boys with DCD, with further research and advocacy for balanced portfolios of personally meaningful leisure.

doi: 10.3928/15394492-20100722-02

OTJR Copyright and Fair Use Policy
To prevent copyright infringement, we request that authors, subscribers, and those who purchase PDFs through the full-text web site not share the PDFs with outside sources via e-mail. Content of the articles, whether in print or electronic format, remains the property of The American Occupational Therapy Foundation.