Author:
Arifin Tazul,Tarsidi Iding,Ratnawati Andayani
Abstract
One of the characteristics of children with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is difficulty paying attention and difficulty listening. This can hinder children with ADHD in learning to imitate, such as imitating activities that use gross motor skills. This study aims to determine the effectiveness of interventions using ablution movements with prompting techniques in improving the imitation gross motor skills of children with ADHD. The method used is an experimental method with the type of single subject research (SSR) and using the ABA design on one child with ADHD. The results of the study find that ablution interventions with appropriate prompting techniques according to children's abilities could improve the gross motor imitation skills of children with ADHD, this is evidenced by the increase in the average gross motor imitation ability of the subjects from 15.9% to 86.3% after being intervened 30 sessions. The improvement in gross motor imitation skills involving the hands is getting better, but the subject had not been able to distinguish which one is right and left when not given a verbal command.
Publisher
Angstrom Centre of Education Journal Management
Reference21 articles.
1. American Psychiatric Association. (2013). Diagnostic And Statistical Manual Of Mental Disorders, 5th Edition. Arlington, Va: American Psychiatric Association.
2. Amira, L. D., Huda, A., & Pradipta, R. F. (2021). The Addictive Game toward Children with ADHD. Journal of ICSAR, 05(No. 02).
3. Bandura, A. (1986). Social Foudation Of Thought And Action. Englewood Cliffs, Nj: Prentice-Hall.
4. Cakiroglu, O. (2012). Single subject research: applications to special education. British Journal of Special Education, 39(1), 21–29. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8578.2012.00530.x
5. Cox, T. D. (2011). The Absent Graduate Student: An A-B-A Single-Subject Experiment of Online Discussion Participation. The Journal Of Effective Teaching, 11, 96–109.