Department of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences
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Browsing Department of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences by Subject "Activity programs in education"
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- ItemPre- and post-test results of the cognitive functioning level of workers with intellectual impairment after the implementation of a structured activity programme in a protective workshop(Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University, 2005-12) Goliath, Charlyn Delmarie; Beukes, S.; Kemp, Rene; Stellenbosch University. Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences. Dept. of Medicine.ENGLISH ABSTRACT: Acknowledgement of the right to equal work opportunities for people with disabilities is widely supported in South Africa. Several policy documents and laws have been published since July 1993 and provide clear guidelines regarding equal opportunities for people with disabilities. A state subsidy scheme for protective workshops was introduced for the first time on 1 April 1997 (Operational Manual for Protective Workshops, 2001: 1). The purpose of this subsidy scheme was to provide work opportunities for people who cannot enter the sheltered or open labour market due to the effect of their disabilities on their daily functioning. In March 2001, the Department of Social Development and Poverty Alleviation in the Western Cape introduced a draft document, Operational Manual for Protective Workshops. The aim of the manual focused on the development of the worker role and economic empowerment of people with disabilities who work in protective workshops. Due to ignorance, fear and stereotyping, persons with intellectual impairment are being unfairly discriminated against in society and at the workplace. With reasonable accommodation, persons with intellectual impairment are able to demonstrate their work ability and contribute equally in the workplace. Persons with intellectual impairment contribute to the economy and society by means of their service in protective workshops. The aim of the study was to investigate whether the structured activity programme implemented in a protective workshop in the Western Cape brought a change to the level of cognitive functioning of workers with intellectual impairment as assessed by the Allen Cognitive Level Screen (ACLS), with the purpose of making recommendations regarding the sustainability and extension of the structured activity programme. Pre- and post-tests of the workers' cognitive functioning were done to determine whether the implemented structured activity programme had an effect on the cognitive functioning level of the workers. The ACLS was used as measurement instrument and a hypothesis was stated: HO - There is no change in the level of cognitive functioning of the workers after participation in a structured activity programme. H1 - There is a change in the level of cognitive functioning of the workers after participation in a structured activity programme. The Functional Information Processing Model (FIPM) was used as a frame of reference in the development of the structured activity programme for the occupational group. The structured activity programme was implemented and after one year and six months a post-test was done on the workers in the occupational group. The null hypothesis was accepted as p=O.28.A 95% confidence interval was indicated. The post-test indicated that there was no significant change in the cognitive levels of the workers in the occupational group after implementation of a structured activity programme. This could have resulted from the study sample being too small. Although the change was not statistically significant. it indicated that learning did occur on an Allen Cognitive Level (ACL) 3. It is recommended that the study to be replicated at other protective workshops that may provide a bigger sample to confirm the amount of learning that takes place.