An evaluation of Lego-based Therapy and its impact on anxiety experienced by primary school-aged children with social communication difficulties

Educational provision for children with social communication difficulties is constantly evolving to support not just social development, but also emotional development. With an emphasis on integrative and inclusive practices for all children, a range of interventions to support the diverse needs of...

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Main Author: Lynch, Emma
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/57248/
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author Lynch, Emma
author_facet Lynch, Emma
author_sort Lynch, Emma
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Educational provision for children with social communication difficulties is constantly evolving to support not just social development, but also emotional development. With an emphasis on integrative and inclusive practices for all children, a range of interventions to support the diverse needs of this heterogeneous population are needed. Lego-based Therapy has captured interest over the past decade as an intervention that can support and nurture the social and emotional needs of children with social communication difficulties. This research evaluated the claim that Lego-based Therapy could reduce the anxiety experienced by primary school-aged children with social communication difficulties; a claim that has previously been unsupported. Using a pragmatic mixed-method approach, three case-studies were conducted. Quantitative data, from pre-and-post measures and single-case experimental designs (SCEDs), was triangulated with qualitative data, from semi-structured interviews. Numerical measures were collected from children, their parents and teachers in order to provide a holistic overview of a child’s anxiety. Pre- and post-analysis along with visual analysis from the embedded SCEDs provided tentative evidence to support the principal research question. According to self-report data from all three children, Lego-based therapy can be considered to have some positive effects on their reported anxiety following a 10-week Lego-based Therapy intervention. A similar finding was also reported by two of the three children’s teachers. However, contradictory findings came from parental ratings of their child’s anxiety, where a positive impact could not be determined. The qualitative analysis revealed core categories the facilitators and children perceived to be important in the success of Lego-based Therapy. Using the preliminary findings of the study, this research concludes that for primary school-aged children with social communication difficulties, Lego-based Therapy can have some positive effects on anxiety.
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spelling nottingham-572482025-02-28T14:37:49Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/57248/ An evaluation of Lego-based Therapy and its impact on anxiety experienced by primary school-aged children with social communication difficulties Lynch, Emma Educational provision for children with social communication difficulties is constantly evolving to support not just social development, but also emotional development. With an emphasis on integrative and inclusive practices for all children, a range of interventions to support the diverse needs of this heterogeneous population are needed. Lego-based Therapy has captured interest over the past decade as an intervention that can support and nurture the social and emotional needs of children with social communication difficulties. This research evaluated the claim that Lego-based Therapy could reduce the anxiety experienced by primary school-aged children with social communication difficulties; a claim that has previously been unsupported. Using a pragmatic mixed-method approach, three case-studies were conducted. Quantitative data, from pre-and-post measures and single-case experimental designs (SCEDs), was triangulated with qualitative data, from semi-structured interviews. Numerical measures were collected from children, their parents and teachers in order to provide a holistic overview of a child’s anxiety. Pre- and post-analysis along with visual analysis from the embedded SCEDs provided tentative evidence to support the principal research question. According to self-report data from all three children, Lego-based therapy can be considered to have some positive effects on their reported anxiety following a 10-week Lego-based Therapy intervention. A similar finding was also reported by two of the three children’s teachers. However, contradictory findings came from parental ratings of their child’s anxiety, where a positive impact could not be determined. The qualitative analysis revealed core categories the facilitators and children perceived to be important in the success of Lego-based Therapy. Using the preliminary findings of the study, this research concludes that for primary school-aged children with social communication difficulties, Lego-based Therapy can have some positive effects on anxiety. 2019-12-13 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/57248/1/EmmaLynch_4284900_DAEP_FinalThesis.pdf Lynch, Emma (2019) An evaluation of Lego-based Therapy and its impact on anxiety experienced by primary school-aged children with social communication difficulties. DAppEdPsy thesis, University of Nottingham. Play therapy LEGO toys social communication difficulties anxiety social skills in children
spellingShingle Play therapy
LEGO toys
social communication difficulties
anxiety
social skills in children
Lynch, Emma
An evaluation of Lego-based Therapy and its impact on anxiety experienced by primary school-aged children with social communication difficulties
title An evaluation of Lego-based Therapy and its impact on anxiety experienced by primary school-aged children with social communication difficulties
title_full An evaluation of Lego-based Therapy and its impact on anxiety experienced by primary school-aged children with social communication difficulties
title_fullStr An evaluation of Lego-based Therapy and its impact on anxiety experienced by primary school-aged children with social communication difficulties
title_full_unstemmed An evaluation of Lego-based Therapy and its impact on anxiety experienced by primary school-aged children with social communication difficulties
title_short An evaluation of Lego-based Therapy and its impact on anxiety experienced by primary school-aged children with social communication difficulties
title_sort evaluation of lego-based therapy and its impact on anxiety experienced by primary school-aged children with social communication difficulties
topic Play therapy
LEGO toys
social communication difficulties
anxiety
social skills in children
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/57248/