Abstract

This study sought to show how swimming and aquatic activities might help people with Down syndrome with their coordination and balance (knowledge of one’s own body and its parts, awareness of one’s own image, and laterality). The target group consisted of 15 Down syndrome-diagnosed children (n=15), children who did not practice swimming lessons or any activity that involved physical movement in the water but only had engaged in structured physical activities outside of the physical education classes that were part of the school curriculum. We can reject the null hypothesis that swimming and aquatic activities do not create the body schema, a component of psychomotricity, because each participant significantly improved their final score on each of the 10 items, and the overall p-value was less than 0.05. applying a swimming program that incorporates challenging and diverse aquatic activities might help people with Down syndrome build their body schema, a crucial aspect of human psychomotricity.

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