Elena Macuk
Articles
ART 221074
In the conditions of an information civilization, the processes of globalization and the simultaneous humanization of society, rapid transformations are taking place in the education system. A modern school that legitimizes the right of every child, including those with health impairments, to receive education does not have time to provide the technological component of the multilevel process of learning and upbringing. Younger schoolchildren living through the period of reaching a new level of personal development and adapting to the new requirements of society are particularly vulnerable. Almost all students with health impairments at the initial stage of training have a disorder of school skills in the form of violations of writing (dysgraphia), reading, and general underdevelopment of oral speech. The purpose of our research was to work out a training program that, in addition to speech therapy technologies, would include didactic tools capable of influencing intentional acts of students’ consciousness, thus regulating cognitive activity, and increasing the effectiveness of speech technologies to overcome dysgraphia. The article analyzes interdisciplinary approaches to teaching younger schoolchildren with dysgraphia from the positions of didactics, psychology, logopedics, and neuropsychology. The didactic potential of sense techniques in the form of “sense tasks” is considered. The method of didactic modelling was chosen as the main method of experimental work to assess the effectiveness of the dysgraphia overcoming program using “sense tasks”; among the methods of the empirical level are observation, experiment, and comparison. The research results showed the possibility of a corrective effect on the speech characteristics of younger schoolchildren with dysgraphia by means of a didactic program using “sense tasks”. The best dynamics had schoolchildren with regulatory dysgraphia according to neuropsychological classification, demonstrating the effectiveness of meaning techniques in influencing the emotional, volitional, and cognitive sphere of schoolchildren, ultimately improving the characteristics of programming activities and self-control. Improvements in writing performance were observed in groups with acoustic dysgraphia and dysorthography. The article is of interest to methodologists and teachers of primary education, speech therapists, and neuropsychologists of secondary schools.