Children With Autism More Likely To Have Handwriting Problems
Main Category: AutismAlso Included In: Neurology / Neuroscience; Pediatrics / Children's Health
Article Date: 10 Nov 2009 - 9:00 PDT
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Children with autism may have lower quality handwriting and trouble forming letters compared to children without autism, according to a study published in the November 10, 2009, print issue of Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology.
The study included 28 children between the ages of eight and 13. Half of the children had autism spectrum disorder. The other half had no developmental, psychiatric or brain disorders. All of the children scored within the normal range for perceptual reasoning on an IQ test.
The children were given the Minnesota Handwriting Assessment Test, which uses a scrambled sentence to eliminate any speed advantage for more fluent readers. The sentence used on the test was "the brown jumped lazy fox quick dogs over." Participants were asked to copy the words in the sentence, making the letters the same size and shape as the sample using their best handwriting. The handwriting was scored based on five categories: legibility, form, alignment, size and spacing. The children's motor skills, including balance and timed movements, were also examined and given a rating.
The research found that half of the children with autism earned less than 80 percent of the total possible points on the handwriting assessment, compared to only one child in the group without autism. In addition, nine of the 14 children with autism scored below 80 percent on the form category of the handwriting assessment, compared to only two of the 14 children without autism.
"Our results suggest that therapies targeting motor skills may help improve handwriting in children with autism, which is important for success in school and building self-esteem," said study author Amy Bastian, PhD, of the Kennedy Krieger Institute and Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in Baltimore, MD. "Such therapies could include training of letter formation and general training of fine motor control to help improve the quality of their writing."
While overall quality of handwriting was worse in children with autism spectrum disorders, they were still able to align, space and size their letters just as well as children without autism.
The study was supported by an Autism Speaks Pre-Doctoral Fellowship and by the National Institutes of Health.
Source
American Academy of Neurology
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Important Ground -- But It Needs To Go Farther
posted by Kate Gladstone on 25 Nov 2009 at 4:58 amAs a person on the autism spectrum (severe Asperger's: see below for my handwriting experiences), I believe that research on handwriting impairments in autism breaks important ground -- but it needs to go farther.
Not only children are affected; the handwriting of most of us adults on the autism spectrum is also notoriously dysfunctional.
Writing of most adults with Asperger's or autism strongly resembles that of children with autism: often, in fact, handwriting of adults on the autism spectrum is worse than that of children with the same
diagnosis.
Social, occupational, and other hardships imposed by such dysfunctional handwriting (and by its frequent tendency to become worse, not better, with maturation) can in fact have an even deeper,
more embarrassing impact on adult patients than on the young.
Case in point:
I did not write legibly or with any useful level of speed until age 24 (halfway through graduate school: years after MDs, educators, and therapists had advised me to forget about handwriting altogether). At
that time, I gained legible rapid handwriting only by creating some self-remediation which had to discard much conventional wisdom on the subject.
That self-remediation -- as far as I can discover, the only handwriting intervention designed by anyeone who actually experienced the difficulties in question -- eventually became a medical CME program reviewed in the October 1997 JAMA article "Poor Physician Penmanship." More recently, it has become an iPhone/iPodTouch "personal handwriting trainer" application called Better Letters
--produced by the medical software company Deep Pocket Series
(http://deeppocketseries.com/Better_Letters.php --
app download page:
http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/better-letters/id335485938?mt=8 )
Those living and working with autism and/or handwriting impairments -- as well as other professionals, patients, and family members concerned with handwriting speed and legibility -- may
conceivably benefit from knowing about this resource created by someone who has experienced both sets of issues.
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