Masters Degrees (Music)
Permanent URI for this collection
Browse
Browsing Masters Degrees (Music) by Subject "Attention-deficit disorder in adolescence"
Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
Results Per Page
Sort Options
- ItemHelping control Attention Deficit Disorder behaviour using musical activities(Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University, 2013-03) Redfern, Jane F.; Van Niekerk, Caroline; Ludemann, Winfried; Stellenbosch University. Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences. Dept. of Music.ENGLISH ABSTRACT: As a recent graduate, I feel that young educators are graduating from South African universities and are teaching in schools without adequate knowledge of the various learning disabilities and behavioural disorders that many children suffer from. In the context of the Arts & Culture or music classroom, educators especially suffer as they are taught to encourage creativity. However, how can one differentiate between creative behaviour and disruptive behaviour and be certain that bad behaviour is not a symptom of a behavioural disorder? Upon graduation and starting to teach in the southern suburbs in the Western Cape, the researcher was struck by the number of children diagnosed with behaviour disorders and taking the stimulant medication Ritalin. Yet the notion of medicating a child for a behavioural disorder is not agreeable to many parents and educators to whom the researcher has spoken while researching this topic. The general feeling seems to be that a child should be given space to be creative, but a teacher cannot control a class of at least twenty-five children who are all claiming their own creative rights. This research explores various steps that a music educator can take to control a class of both medicated and non-medicated learners. The effects of music on the behaviour of learners diagnosed with Attention Deficit Disorder (abbreviated to ADD) have been investigated in various ways over the years and these are described in this thesis. Likewise, information on various prescription medications and non prescription medications that are available in South Africa are presented to offer options to an educator/parent faced with a child demonstrating behavioural problems. There is also substantiation that by increasing the intake of essential fatty acids and adjusting a child’s diet, one can positively enhance behaviour and concentration. The researcher discusses the various foods that should be avoided and those should be enjoyed generously. The researcher observed learners who were considered problematic in the general classroom in the form of observation of behaviours before and after each musical activity. Class educators were asked to assist the researcher by further observing the selected children’s behaviour in the following lesson.