Di Lieto Maria Chiara, Castro Emanuela, Pecini Chiara, Inguaggiato Emanuela, Cecchi Francesca, Dario Paolo, Cioni Giovanni, Sgandurra Giuseppina
Department of Developmental Neuroscience, Istituto di Ricovero e Cura a Carattere Scientifico (IRCCS) Fondazione Stella Maris, Pisa, Italy.
Department of Education, Language, Interculture and Psychology, University of Florence, Florence, Italy.
Front Psychol. 2020 Jan 9;10:2813. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2019.02813. eCollection 2019.
Children with Special Needs represent a highly heterogeneous group in terms of neurofunctional, behavioral, and socio-cognitive characteristics, but they have in common a frequent impairment of Executive Functions. Educational Robotics is generally dedicated to study the effects of constructing and programming robots based on children's learning and academic achievement. Recently, we found that being engaged in progressively more challenging robot planning and monitoring (ER-Lab) promotes visual-spatial working memory and response inhibition in early childhood during typical development, and that an ER-Lab can be a feasible rehabilitative tool for children with Special Needs. The present study aimed to verify the efficacy of the ER-Lab on Executive Functions in children with Special Needs for the first time by using an RCT within their school environment. To pursue these aims, this study reports the results obtained in 42 first-grade children with Special Needs engaged in school Educational Robotics Laboratories (ER-Lab) to promote Executive Functions by means of enjoyable, intensive, and incrementally more challenging activities requiring them to program a bee-shaped robot called Bee-bot (Campus Store). Several adaptations were done to meet different motor, cognitive, and social needs. All children were evaluated by means of standardized tests performed by each child before and at the end of the ER-Lab activities. Children with Special Needs had significantly improved inhibition skills, and children with attentional impairment had more benefits in their inhibition of motor responses tasks with respect to children with a language deficit. Results of the study and future perspectives on how ER-Lab programs could become a powerful tool in classrooms with children with special needs are discussed.
有特殊需求的儿童在神经功能、行为和社会认知特征方面表现为高度异质性群体,但他们都有一个共同特点,即执行功能经常受损。教育机器人技术通常致力于研究基于儿童学习和学业成绩构建和编程机器人的效果。最近,我们发现参与难度逐渐增加的机器人规划和监控(ER实验室)可促进典型发育阶段幼儿的视觉空间工作记忆和反应抑制,而且ER实验室可以成为有特殊需求儿童的一种可行康复工具。本研究旨在首次通过在学校环境中进行随机对照试验,验证ER实验室对有特殊需求儿童执行功能的疗效。为实现这些目标,本研究报告了42名一年级有特殊需求儿童在学校教育机器人实验室(ER实验室)的研究结果,这些儿童通过参与有趣、密集且难度逐渐增加的活动来促进执行功能,这些活动要求他们对一个名为Bee-bot(校园商店)的蜜蜂形状机器人进行编程。还进行了多项调整以满足不同的运动、认知和社交需求。所有儿童在ER实验室活动开始前和结束时均通过标准化测试进行评估。有特殊需求的儿童的抑制技能有显著提高,与有语言缺陷的儿童相比,有注意力障碍的儿童在抑制运动反应任务方面受益更多。本文讨论了研究结果以及关于ER实验室项目如何成为有特殊需求儿童课堂上有力工具的未来展望。