By Anonymous (not verified), 14 October, 2025

Select the behavior that most closely matches your observations:

By Anonymous (not verified), 14 October, 2025

Introduce the activity by saying:

"This activity is a picture design.Can you copy this picture by using the pieces provided?"

Ending the Activity

The activity ends when the person has finished the design or shows signs of fatigue.

Observe the number of times they glance at the sample.

By Anonymous (not verified), 14 October, 2025

Sit the person at a table or place a tray on their lap that they can work from.

Place the blank card on their working space.

Place the pieces next to the blank card with the colored side face up.

Hold up the sample in a position where you can see when their pupils focus on the sample.

Pay attention to the number of times they glance at the sample.

By Anonymous (not verified), 14 October, 2025

The pieces will need to be pre-cut by the therapist.

Laminating the sample and pieces will make the activity cleanable and reusable.

Magnetic stickers may also be used with a metallic board for people affected by tremors.

Feel free to modify this clover activity by printing it on cardboard, craft foam or using felt pieces if they have reduced hand function.

You will require a blank card or other flat surface for them to work from.

By Anonymous (not verified), 14 October, 2025

The clover profile activity is used to differentiate between profiles ACL 3 High to ACL 5 Low.

By Anonymous (not verified), 6 June, 2025

A failure to provide a positive experience while doing the activity is a serious problem for an affirmative activity, but no big deal for an evaluative activity. To sustain long-term engagement in doing the activity, an affirmative sense of some kind must be formed.

By Anonymous (not verified), 6 June, 2025

When creating affirmative activities, obsolete identities can often be seen as an obstacle. The person may dislike doing activities which are seen as being beneath them. They may refuse treatment as they do not see themselves as having a problem. Using the person's obsolete identity to create affirmative activities may be the solution. Nancy Reagan would help her husband Ronald Reagan get ready for a "working day at the office". He would eat breakfast, get dressed nicely in his suit and go to the office. The secretaries had blank paperwork for him to sign and he was happily occupied.

By Anonymous (not verified), 6 June, 2025

A favorable sense of identity, comfort, safety, security, satisfaction, pleasure, or achievement can be formed while people with a cognitive disability are doing activities. Measures of attendance and sustained attention time can quantify being busy. We all know that being busy is not always affirmative, i.e. a necessary evil. Confirming the value and dignity of a person requires a decent lifestyle that includes favorable activity experiences. Nothing to do between meals is the antonym, and the message received by the person is disrespectful.

By Anonymous (not verified), 6 June, 2025

Direct assistance is required when the person is unable to carry out all or part of the task. Sometimes the caregiver needs to set up the task when the person lacks the ability to plan the task, e.g. for a person functioning in ACL 3 High, the caregiver lines up the clothing on the bed in the correct order for the person to get dressed.

By Anonymous (not verified), 6 June, 2025

Verbal Cues

Verbal cues are one or two word phrases used to prompt the person into action. Verbal cues are only helpful when the person has a mental picture of what they need to do.

Visual Cues

Visual cues is information that the person can understand which prompts them into action.