Goal setting and skills achievements in children with disabilities
Forskaren Kristina Vroland har i sin avhandling studerat hur barnen med olika funktionshinder når mål och hur de sätter mål.
Kristina Vroland Nordstrand
Docent Lena Krumlinde-Sundholm
Professor Iona Novak, University of Notre Dame, Sydney
Karolinska Institutet
2015-09-18
Goal setting and skills achievements in children with disabilities
Instititionen för kvinnors och barns hälsa
Goal setting and skills achievements in children with disabilities
The overall aim of this thesis was to increase knowledge about how children with different types of disabilities can identify performance issues and select goals for intervention. Furthermore, the objective was to study the effects of a goal-directed, task-oriented intervention based on children’s self-identified goals from both quantitative and qualitative perspectives.
Establishing intervention goals with families, to improve the ability of children with disabilities to perform tasks that they need, want, or are expected to do, to participate in their everyday lives is a central part of paediatric occupational therapy. Within this process children’s perspectives are of importance; to give greater consideration to children’s needs, the children need to be involved in the goal-setting process. As goal setting is an abstract process, it can be questioned whether children with disabilities can identify goals and whether their goals are functional and achievable. Further knowledge about how the child’s self-identified goals influence goal-directed intervention is sparse or even lacking. A specific interest was directed towards including the children in the goal setting, using the Perceived Efficacy and Goal Setting System (PEGS).
The PEGS is a picture-based self-report for children, developed in Canada. It uses children’s self-reported performance on everyday tasks to allow them to choose and prioritize goals for intervention. To be useful in a Swedish context, the PEGS needed to be translated and adapted. In study I, five items in the PEGS required adaptation, and one new item was added. Using the Swedish version of the PEGS, 44 child–parent dyads were able to identify individual strengths and weaknesses in the child’s performance of everyday tasks as well as to select goals for intervention.
Children’s self-identified goals in studies I–III included improvements in self-care, and leisure and school tasks. In study II, results from 18 children showed that their goals were relatively stable over time: 78% had an absolute agreement ranging from 50% to 100%. Moreover, in studies II and III goals identified by the children differed from those identified by their parents, and results from 31 child–parent dyads in study II, showed that 48% of the children had no goals identical to those chosen by their parents.
In studies III and IV, when goal-directed, task-oriented intervention was provided, children’s self-identified goals were achievable. There was evidence of an increase in mean goal attainment (mean T-scores) in both groups (child-goal (n=17): estimated mean difference [EMD] 27.84, 95% confidence interval [CI] 22.93 to 32.76; parent-goal (n=16): EMD 21.42, 95% CI 16.16 to 26.67). There was no evidence of a differences in mean T-scores post-intervention between the two groups (EMD 6.42, 95% CI -0.80 to 13.65), which indicates that children’s self-identified goals are achievable to the same extent as goals identified by parents. These results were sustained at the 5-month follow-up.
From a parental perspective, working on children’s self-identified goals was overall a positive experience. The findings revealed three categories: Goals challenged the parents, The intervention demanded an intensive and flexible parental engagement, and The child’s personal goals gave more than anticipated. Even though the goal-directed intervention comprehensively relied on the parents’ engagement and sometimes was challenging, the parents observed that the children’s personal goals positively influenced the children’s self-esteem, increased the children’s motivation for practice, and helped their children develop more than they as parents had anticipated.
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