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The implementation of developmental play therapy with pre-schoolers in a primary school : a case studyBotha, Cynthia Evelyn 04 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MEdPsych)--University of Stellenbosch, 2004. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: My study aims to explore whether a Developmental Play Programme can be
implemented in a primary school with learners, using trained volunteer therapists
from an old age home in the area. I also looked at the experiences of the learners
and that of the volunteer therapists using Developmental Play Therapy as a
therapeutic technique. The technique facilitates the development of child-adult
relationships that are necessary for the development of children. The research is in
the form of a qualitative case study. It is approached from an ecosystemic
perspective i.e. learners are viewed as a core system which in turn is part of several
other systems, for example the family, school, church, community etc. The systems
are interdependent, which means that change in the one system also results in
change within other systems. In the data production video recordings, unstructured
interviews, observations and field notes are used. Data analysis was done using
principles of coding. The results of the study show that Developmental Play Therapy
is indeed an effective psychotherapeutic technique to use in a primary school with a
group of learners and to use senior citizens as volunteer therapists to do the therapy. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Die doel met die studie is om na te vors of die Ontwikkelende speelprogram op
leerders in 'n primêre skool toegepas kan word, deur inwoners van 'n ouetehuis in
die area op te lei as vrywillige terapeute. Ek het die ervaringe van die leerders en die
van die vrywillige terapeute observeer waar Ontwikkelende Speelterapie as
terapeutiese tegniek toegepas is. Die tegniek bevorder onder andere die
ontwikkeling van ouer - kindverhoudings, wat noodsaaklik is vir die ontwikkeling van
kinders. Die navorsing neem die vorm van 'n kwalitatiewe gevallestudie aan. Dit
word benader vanuit 'n ekosistemiese perspektief, dit wil sê die leerders word gesien
as die kernsisteem wat deel is van verskeie ander sisteme soos byvoorbeeld die
familie, skool, kerk en gemeenskap. Die sisteme is interafhanklik wat beteken dat
verandering in een sisteem ook verandering in die ander sisteme tot gevolg het. In
die data - produksie is tegnieke naamlik video - opnames, ongestruktureerde
onderhoude, observasies en veldnotas gebruik. Data - analise is volgens die
beginsels van kodering gedoen. Die resultate van die onderhewige studie toon dat
Ontwikkelende speelterapie 'n effektiewe psigoterapeutiese tegniek is om in 'n
primêre skool te gebruik met 'n groep leerders, en om gebruik te maak van senior
burgers as vrywillige terapeute om die terapie te doen.
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A case study analysis of thematic transformations in nondirective play therapyLevin, Susan Charlotte 11 1900 (has links)
A multiple case study approach was employed in this
intensive thematic analysis of the process of nondirective play
therapy. Using a naturalistic research paradigm, this study
undertook to identify and describe the principal verbal and play
themes and their transformations emergent over a course of play
therapy, as well as to identify and describe similarities and
differences between the themes emergent in those two domains.
Play and verbalization, two types of symbolic expression, were
considered routes of access to the child’s evolution of personal
meaning.
The research participants in this multiple case study were 4
preschoolers, aged 3 to 4. Each participant received 20 weekly
play therapy sessions which were videotaped and transcribed.
Running notations were made on the verbatim transcripts as to
participants’ play activities. Separate coding schemes were
devised for the emergent play and verbal themes. Supplemental
data collection, organization, and analysis procedures included a
field notebook with post hoc descriptions of the sessions,
session summary sheets profiling play and verbal themes, charts,
and memos.
This study, discovery-oriented and exploratory in nature,
yielded rich descriptions of the intricacies of therapeutic
change on two symbolic levels. From these descriptions were
extracted not only information on the transformations in play and
verbal themes but also an understanding of the qualitative
changes which denote the phases of therapy, and insight into the
process of evolving meaning across these phases.
A central finding of this study was that the arrays of play
and verbal themes and their patterns of transformations were
highly individualized. However, a number of themes emerged in
common to all cases: Exploration, Aggression, Messing, Distress,
and Caregiving or Nurturance. Participants were observed to work
through contrasting themes, with preschoolers’ therapy
characterized as an active struggle with such intense,
oppositional forces as birth and death, injury and recovery, loss
and retrieval. Typical thematic transformations included
movement from infantile vulnerability to mastery, from grief
toward resolution, from fear to safety and protection.
The beginning phase of therapy was found to be typified by
exploratory play. The middle phase was typified by intensified
involvement in play and by experiences of disinhibition. The end
phase was characterized by two contrasting yet not mutually
exclusive tendencies, namely, the introduction of a sense of
hopefulness, confidence, and integration; and an improved
capacity to deal with difficult psychological material. Entry
into the middle and end phases was signalled by qualitative
shifts in the child’s attentional, tensional, or relational
state.
The theoretical implications of this study included insight
into the critical role of the child’s initiative and of the
therapist’s permissiveness in the unfolding of symbolic
expression. Each individual case contained specific theoretical
implications for such classic problem and treatment phenomena as
developmental delay and play disruptions.
The practical implications of this study include emphasizing
the need for practitioners to counterbalance attention to the
child’s verbal expression with attention to transformations in
play activity and play material usage. It is suggested that
further research extend the ramifications of this exploratory
study by examining the themes occurring in treatment within
homogeneous populations according to problem configuration.
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A case study analysis of thematic transformations in nondirective play therapyLevin, Susan Charlotte 11 1900 (has links)
A multiple case study approach was employed in this
intensive thematic analysis of the process of nondirective play
therapy. Using a naturalistic research paradigm, this study
undertook to identify and describe the principal verbal and play
themes and their transformations emergent over a course of play
therapy, as well as to identify and describe similarities and
differences between the themes emergent in those two domains.
Play and verbalization, two types of symbolic expression, were
considered routes of access to the child’s evolution of personal
meaning.
The research participants in this multiple case study were 4
preschoolers, aged 3 to 4. Each participant received 20 weekly
play therapy sessions which were videotaped and transcribed.
Running notations were made on the verbatim transcripts as to
participants’ play activities. Separate coding schemes were
devised for the emergent play and verbal themes. Supplemental
data collection, organization, and analysis procedures included a
field notebook with post hoc descriptions of the sessions,
session summary sheets profiling play and verbal themes, charts,
and memos.
This study, discovery-oriented and exploratory in nature,
yielded rich descriptions of the intricacies of therapeutic
change on two symbolic levels. From these descriptions were
extracted not only information on the transformations in play and
verbal themes but also an understanding of the qualitative
changes which denote the phases of therapy, and insight into the
process of evolving meaning across these phases.
A central finding of this study was that the arrays of play
and verbal themes and their patterns of transformations were
highly individualized. However, a number of themes emerged in
common to all cases: Exploration, Aggression, Messing, Distress,
and Caregiving or Nurturance. Participants were observed to work
through contrasting themes, with preschoolers’ therapy
characterized as an active struggle with such intense,
oppositional forces as birth and death, injury and recovery, loss
and retrieval. Typical thematic transformations included
movement from infantile vulnerability to mastery, from grief
toward resolution, from fear to safety and protection.
The beginning phase of therapy was found to be typified by
exploratory play. The middle phase was typified by intensified
involvement in play and by experiences of disinhibition. The end
phase was characterized by two contrasting yet not mutually
exclusive tendencies, namely, the introduction of a sense of
hopefulness, confidence, and integration; and an improved
capacity to deal with difficult psychological material. Entry
into the middle and end phases was signalled by qualitative
shifts in the child’s attentional, tensional, or relational
state.
The theoretical implications of this study included insight
into the critical role of the child’s initiative and of the
therapist’s permissiveness in the unfolding of symbolic
expression. Each individual case contained specific theoretical
implications for such classic problem and treatment phenomena as
developmental delay and play disruptions.
The practical implications of this study include emphasizing
the need for practitioners to counterbalance attention to the
child’s verbal expression with attention to transformations in
play activity and play material usage. It is suggested that
further research extend the ramifications of this exploratory
study by examining the themes occurring in treatment within
homogeneous populations according to problem configuration. / Education, Faculty of / Educational and Counselling Psychology, and Special Education (ECPS), Department of / Graduate
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Relationship between child centered play therapy and developmental levels of young children: A single case analysis.Garofano-Brown, April 12 1900 (has links)
This study used a single case design to explore the relationship between individual child-centered play therapy on children with developmental delays by examining its effectiveness in: 1) increasing measured developmental age; 2) reducing problematic behaviors related to developmental delays; and 3) increasing developmentally appropriate behaviors. Three participants were assessed weekly with both developmental and behavioral measures during the three phases of the study: baseline, intervention, and follow up. Additionally, parents of the participants completed behavioral measures at pretest, midpoint, and posttest administrations. The participant's weekly standard scores were graphed and results were examined separately using visual analyses. Changes between phases: non-intervention baseline, intervention, and non-intervention follow-up were examined; specifically, the level, trend, and variability of the data across the phases were examined. Each of the three participants served as their own control group in this single case analysis and their results, and all three of the participants demonstrated improvement on the developmental measures after receiving the play therapy intervention. Results from this single case analysis suggest the need for further replication, use and reporting of single case interventions and designs, to promote the efficacy of counseling interventions and to potentially enhance the literature and research base for evidence based interventions.
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Narrative play therapy and the journey of a boy diagnosed with a learning disability: a case studyTopper, Kegan January 2010 (has links)
This study offers a detailed exploration of the personal narrative of a nine year old boy diagnosed with a learning disability, and explains how the nature of the therapeutic relationship facilitated shifts in his personal understandings of himself, others and the world. Children diagnosed with learning disabilities experience a range of challenges in their different life contexts, and particularly within the school context. This is often because of constant evaluation and surveillance from teachers, family members and peers, who define the child within rigid and limiting frameworks. Soon enough children diagnosed with learning disabilities develop problem-saturated narratives that can significantly influence their relationship with themselves and others. This is because the individualising effects of having a disability cause them to feel different or isolated from their peers. This study illustrates an eight session case study, facilitated by a narrative play therapy approach, between a counsellor, a child and his parents. The therapeutic encounters were intended to assist the child in moving away from problem-saturated narratives of incompetence and inferiority towards more preferred narratives that would positively influence his self esteem. Key words: learning disability, dyslexia, narrative, narrative therapy, identity, self esteem. Children Diagnosed with a Learning Disability Children who have been diagnosed with a learning disability often experience themselves and their world very differently from other children (Rodis, Garrod, & Boscardin, 2001). Within the educational system a considerable amount of pressure is placed on children to succeed. The educational discourse of achievement that professes itself to be the only direction from which a successful future can be attained, marginalizes and rejects those children whose knowledge and skills exist outside this rigid and oftentimes insensitive system of evaluation. As a result, children soon create problem saturated narratives, believing themselves to be the problem. However, in the last two decades there has been a move from reductionism to constructivism and as a result research in the field of learning disabilities has started to focus on children’s non-traditional strengths and talents, which are often misunderstood and ignored by schools. Armstrong (1987) sums it up as follows: The schools allow millions of imaginative kids to go unrecognised
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兒童中心式遊戲治療對情緖障礙兒童的作用之研究 / Study of the effects of child-centered play therapy on two emotional deficit children蔡嘉敏 January 2002 (has links)
University of Macau / Faculty of Education
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Hanteringsriglyn vir nieverbale leergestremdheid in die middelkinderjare: `n gestaltspelterapeutiese perspektiefLoedolff, Johanna Christina 11 1900 (has links)
The research was directed at setting up guidelines for an interdisciplinary
team which deals with children suffering from nonverbal learning disorder in
middle childhood. The primary motive for the study was to, in general, further
greater awareness of nonverbal learning disorder with parents and the
relevant professions, but in particular, the interdisciplinary team which
therapeutically handles children with nonverbal learning disorder.
For the purpose of this study Thomas and Rothman's Intervention Research
Model was applied. Information from relevant literature and semi-structured
interviews with expertise in the area of learning disabilities was combined in
order to set up guidelines for nonverbal learning disorder in middle childhood.The researcher concludes that thorough background knowledge of child
development should be a precondition before nonverbal learning disorder
could be identified and diagnosed. Because areas of development function
interdependantly of each other, the developmental defecits of the nonverbal
learning disorder child can only be treated effectively in a therapeutic way
through an interdisciplinary team approach. / Social Work / M. Diac. (Play therapy)
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Hanteringsriglyn vir nieverbale leergestremdheid in die middelkinderjare: `n gestaltspelterapeutiese perspektiefLoedolff, Johanna Christina 11 1900 (has links)
The research was directed at setting up guidelines for an interdisciplinary
team which deals with children suffering from nonverbal learning disorder in
middle childhood. The primary motive for the study was to, in general, further
greater awareness of nonverbal learning disorder with parents and the
relevant professions, but in particular, the interdisciplinary team which
therapeutically handles children with nonverbal learning disorder.
For the purpose of this study Thomas and Rothman's Intervention Research
Model was applied. Information from relevant literature and semi-structured
interviews with expertise in the area of learning disabilities was combined in
order to set up guidelines for nonverbal learning disorder in middle childhood.The researcher concludes that thorough background knowledge of child
development should be a precondition before nonverbal learning disorder
could be identified and diagnosed. Because areas of development function
interdependantly of each other, the developmental defecits of the nonverbal
learning disorder child can only be treated effectively in a therapeutic way
through an interdisciplinary team approach. / Social Work / M. Diac. (Play therapy)
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Effectiveness of Child-centered Play Therapy and Person-centered Teacher Consultation on ADHD Behavioral Problems of Elementary School Children: a Single Case Design.Schottelkorb, April A. 12 1900 (has links)
I examined the effectiveness of child-centered play therapy (CCPT) and person-centered teacher consultation (PCTC) for elementary school children identified with clinical or borderline levels of ADHD behaviors on the Teacher Report Form and the Conners' Teacher Rating Scale Revised - Short Form. Additionally, I examined the impact of CCPT and PCTC on the levels of parenting and teaching stress. Due to the current trend to determine interventions that are evidence-based through between-group or single case designs, for this study, I utilized a single case design experiment for which the behaviors of five children were examined. Trained observers utilized the Direct Observation Form in observations of all five students three times per week. Additionally, parents and teachers completed behavioral rating scales and stress inventories at pre-, mid-, and post-intervention. To prevent biased observational ratings, observers were blind to the assignment of the five children. Three students participated in 24 sessions of twice-weekly 30-minute sessions of CCPT, and these students' teachers participated in six sessions of once-weekly 10-minute PCTC. Two students participated in twice-weekly 30-minute sessions of reading mentoring, after which they participated in 14 sessions of CCPT. Visual analysis of the data indicated mixed results. Three students demonstrated substantial improvement in the observed ADHD behaviors within the classroom. Results of the parent and teacher assessment data were inconsistent, but did indicate behavior change for some children and a reduction in teaching stress for one teacher. Parenting stress appeared unaffected. Implications for future research regarding the use of single case design, the measurement of student behavior change, and issues of comorbidity are indicated.
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