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Rachel
11-30-2009, 11:20 PM
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CONSUMER NEWS
Clumsy kids' brains work differently

30/11/2009 1:23:53 PM

CBC News
Researchers at the University of British Columbia are shining a new light on a condition that affects children's ability to print, tie their shoes or play sports.


Called developmental co-ordination disorder (DCD), it affects about six per cent of school-aged children.

For the first time, researchers have shown that the brains of children with DCD are different from other kids.

According to researcher Jill Zwicker, a PhD candidate in rehabilitation sciences at UBC, DCD often leads to struggles in school, partly because the kids find it physically difficult to print or write.

Researchers performed scans to see how the brains of children with DCD were functioning while trying to trace objects on a piece of paper. "We can see that the children with developmental co-ordination disorder are not activating the same brain areas as typically developing children," Zwicker told CBC News.

"We need to do more research to flesh that out a bit more, but it's the first evidence to show that these kids are different at this level as far as their brain activity." Zwicker says the research may help lessen the stigma around the condition, which people often believe is just a lack of co-ordination.

"Many people just think that it's clumsy kids and there's nothing wrong with them and they'll outgrow it," she said. But cumulative research has shown that these children are struggling and this is the first evidence to show that they are neurobiologically different."

She says the effects of DCD reach beyond the soccer field or the classroom. "These children are at higher risk for depression and anxiety as well. So it's not just a motor disorder - it does affect the whole child."

Zwicker says it's not known why the brains of DCD kids are firing differently and there doesn't appear to be any quick fix at this time.

She says parents should consider individual activities for their kids who struggle with team sports, and computers for those having problems with handwriting assignments

Winifred
12-01-2009, 01:03 AM
As a complete klutz myself (remember, I broke my foot while stepping backwards in a Greek dancing lesson....), and the mother and sister of two whose handwriting belongs in a seismograph machine, I can relate to this.

I would caution those who rely on computer word processing to "fix" this. I now have a video game addict who still can't write, altho it's speeding up. I now wish I'd stuck to boring, repetitive pen and paper drills to enhance his writing. I realize this isn't easy, and would've led to his falling behind in school, probably. Might've been worth it, though. Especially difficult dealing with an extremely bright child stuck in a slow-responding body.

I think this is a real problem for kids today, with our instant everything mentality. I keep thinking of Thomas Edison, who was just wired a little slower, and yet was considered mentally deficient until his wise mother pulled him out of school. We tried that, too, with mixed results. There comes a time when said child must decide what's important for himself.

I do think that many people are "neurobiologically different" in many ways, and part of growing up is learning to get along in the many-faceted world anyway!