Children With Cerebral Palsy Playing With Mainstream Robotic Toys: Playfulness and Environmental Supportiveness

Play is a right for every child and has a key role in child development. Play can be analyzed according to the construct of playfulness, which is the child's disposition to play. Children with cerebral palsy (CP) show difficulties in play and can also experience lower playfulness scores when co...

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Published in:Frontiers in psychology Vol. 9; p. 1814
Main Authors: Bulgarelli, Daniela, Bianquin, Nicole, Besio, Serenella, Molina, Paola
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Switzerland Frontiers Media S.A 26-09-2018
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Summary:Play is a right for every child and has a key role in child development. Play can be analyzed according to the construct of playfulness, which is the child's disposition to play. Children with cerebral palsy (CP) show difficulties in play and can also experience lower playfulness scores when compared to matched typically developing children. This paper analyses play and playfulness in children with CP using mainstream robotic toys with supporting adult play partners. Five mainstream robotic toys were selected and used in play situations with six children with CP interacting with two adult partners. The play situations were coded through the Test of Playfulness (ToP) and the Test of Environmental Supportiveness (ToES), to analyze the role of robotic toys, adult partners and environment in supporting play and playfulness in children with CP. The children obtained high ToP scores, showing that they were intrinsically motivated to be engaged in the play situations. The ToP scores weakly correlated with the ToES scores. To discuss this result, different features of each robot, the role of adults as scaffolder, and the space characteristics in supporting play are presented and discussed. This research field is new: to our knowledge, in the literature only one study focused on the use of one type of mainstream robotic toy to support the playfulness of children with CP. The parallel use of the ToP and the ToES was crucial to observe the complexity of the play situations and the role of playmates and toys during the play process. The role of the adult as play scaffolder has been important to mediate between the child with CP and the environment, toys included: the adult should be strongly aware of this role to better support the child in being in charge of the play situation. Further research is needed.
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This article was submitted to Educational Psychology, a section of the journal Frontiers in Psychology
Reviewed by: Anna Lekova, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences (BAS), Bulgaria; Andrea Marcela Morales Reyes, Clemson University, United States
Edited by: Weijun Wang, University at Buffalo, United States
ISSN:1664-1078
1664-1078
DOI:10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01814