Most popular articles
Everything About Peaches. Clemson University Cooperative Extension Service Everything About Peaches Website: whether you are a professional or backyard peach...
Mission Statement. For the sake of mankind and the world as a whole a further increase of the sustainability...
Newsletter 9: July 2013 - Temperate Fruits in the Tropics and Subtropics. Download your copy of the Working Group Temperate...
USA Walnut varieties. The Walnut Germplasm Collection of the University of California, Davis (USA). A description of the Collection and a History...
China Walnut varieties.

Articles

EVALUATING THE BENEFITS OF HORTICULTURAL VOCATIONAL TRAINING FOR PEOPLE WITH MENTAL DISABILITIES AND PSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS

Article number
920_19
Pages
153 – 166
Language
English
Abstract
In Taiwan the Rights Protection Act for People with Disabilities stipulates that the Government must provide vocational training for disadvantaged groups.
In this study, instructors from three organizations: Taichung District Agricultural Research and Extension Station (TDARES), National Yuanlin Agricultural and Industrial Vocational High School (NYAIVHS), and Ciqin Social Welfare Foundation (CSWF), examined ten people with mental disabilities and four with psychiatric disorders at Ciqin farm, Changhua County.
The study lasted approximately one and a half months from 1 November to 14 December 2008 and included 30 hours of horticultural training per week, amounting to 180 hours of training in total.
The training program used in the study included horticultural knowledge, plant care, and use of flowers.
In the pre-test and the post-test, two social workers and a horticulturalist evaluated the participants’ in the following five areas: (1) community skills/adaptability, (2) vocational skills, (3) ability to deal with authority, (4) self-discipline/organizational skills, and (5) communication skills.
They found that in all five areas, the scores in the post-test were significantly higher than those in the pre-test.
In addition, qualitative analysis showed that the people with mental disabilities improved in the following seven areas: basic horticultural knowledge, openness, sociability, conscientiousness, artistic sensibility, self-confidence, and sense of achievement.
Because of limited data, the post-test scores of the people with psychiatric disorders were not significantly higher than the pre-test scores.
Qualitative analysis suggested, however, that these people had improved in the same seven areas as the other participants.

Publication
Authors
Yann-Ray Chen, Yung-Wu Chen , Tzu-Han Chen, Jin-Ling Tsai, Jin-Shui Li, Ren-Hau Li
Keywords
horticultural therapy, mental disability, psychiatric disorder, rating scale
Full text
Online Articles (20)
Yann-Ray Chen | Yung-Wu Chen | Tzu-Han Chen | Jin-Ling Tsai | Jin-Shui Li | Ren-Hau Li