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Evaluation of the Indonesian National Standard for elementary school furniture based on children's anthropometry.
Appl Ergon. 2017 Jul; 62:168-181.AE

Abstract

In Indonesia, National Standardization Agency of Indonesia issued the Indonesian National Standard SNI 12-1015-1989 and SNI 12-1016-1989 to define the type of furniture dimensions that should be used by children in the elementary school level. This study aims to examine whether the current national standards for elementary school furniture dimensions issued by National Standardization Agency of Indonesia match the up-to-date Indonesian children's anthropometry. Two types of school furniture, small type (Type I, for grade 1-3) and large type (Type II, for grade 4-6), were evaluated in terms of seat height, seat depth, seat width and backrest height of a chair as well as the height and underneath height of a desk. 1146 students aged between 6 and 12 years old participated in the study. Seven anthropometric measurements were taken including stature, sitting shoulder height, sitting elbow height, popliteal height, buttock-popliteal length, knee height and hip breadth. Based on the standard school furniture dimensions and students' body dimensions, numbers of matches and mismatches between them were computed. Results indicated a substantial degree of mismatch between children's anthropometry and the standard dimensions of school furniture. The standard seat height was not appropriate for students among different grades with the mismatch percentage ranging from 63.4% to 96.7% for Type I and 72.7% to 99.0% for Type II. For desk height, the standard dimensions were not appropriate for students among different grades with the mismatch percentage ranging from 32.3% to 88.9% for Type I and 67.7% to 99.0% for Type II. Apparently, the current standards are out of date and need to be updated. Four different sizes of school furniture were hence proposed to accommodate the variation in students' anthropometry from Grade 1 to Grade 6. The proposed standard dimensions (PrS) of school furniture cover a slightly broader range of age and present a higher cumulative fit than the current standard dimensions (CrS). In addition, a better strategy for sizing can be also developed to fit chairs and desks to a larger number of students.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering, Chung Yuan Christian University, 200 Chung Pei Road, Chung Li District, Taoyuan City, 32023, Taiwan, ROC; Department of Industrial Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, Atma Jaya Catholic University, Jalan Jendral Sudirman 51, Jakarta 12930, Indonesia. Electronic address: yantoatma@yahoo.com.Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering, Chung Yuan Christian University, 200 Chung Pei Road, Chung Li District, Taoyuan City, 32023, Taiwan, ROC. Electronic address: chwelu@cycu.edu.tw.Department of Industrial Engineering and Engineering Management, National Tsing Hua University, 101, Section 2 Kuang Fu Road, Hsinchu, 30013, Taiwan, ROC. Electronic address: jmlu@ie.nthu.edu.tw.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

28411727

Citation

Yanto, , et al. "Evaluation of the Indonesian National Standard for Elementary School Furniture Based On Children's Anthropometry." Applied Ergonomics, vol. 62, 2017, pp. 168-181.
Yanto , Lu CW, Lu JM. Evaluation of the Indonesian National Standard for elementary school furniture based on children's anthropometry. Appl Ergon. 2017;62:168-181.
Yanto, ., Lu, C. W., & Lu, J. M. (2017). Evaluation of the Indonesian National Standard for elementary school furniture based on children's anthropometry. Applied Ergonomics, 62, 168-181. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apergo.2017.03.004
Yanto , Lu CW, Lu JM. Evaluation of the Indonesian National Standard for Elementary School Furniture Based On Children's Anthropometry. Appl Ergon. 2017;62:168-181. PubMed PMID: 28411727.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Evaluation of the Indonesian National Standard for elementary school furniture based on children's anthropometry. AU - Yanto,, AU - Lu,Chih-Wei, AU - Lu,Jun-Ming, Y1 - 2017/03/16/ PY - 2016/01/05/received PY - 2017/02/28/revised PY - 2017/03/03/accepted PY - 2017/4/17/entrez PY - 2017/4/17/pubmed PY - 2017/10/25/medline KW - Chair and desk dimensions KW - Children anthropometry KW - Mismatch KW - The Indonesian national standard SP - 168 EP - 181 JF - Applied ergonomics JO - Appl Ergon VL - 62 N2 - In Indonesia, National Standardization Agency of Indonesia issued the Indonesian National Standard SNI 12-1015-1989 and SNI 12-1016-1989 to define the type of furniture dimensions that should be used by children in the elementary school level. This study aims to examine whether the current national standards for elementary school furniture dimensions issued by National Standardization Agency of Indonesia match the up-to-date Indonesian children's anthropometry. Two types of school furniture, small type (Type I, for grade 1-3) and large type (Type II, for grade 4-6), were evaluated in terms of seat height, seat depth, seat width and backrest height of a chair as well as the height and underneath height of a desk. 1146 students aged between 6 and 12 years old participated in the study. Seven anthropometric measurements were taken including stature, sitting shoulder height, sitting elbow height, popliteal height, buttock-popliteal length, knee height and hip breadth. Based on the standard school furniture dimensions and students' body dimensions, numbers of matches and mismatches between them were computed. Results indicated a substantial degree of mismatch between children's anthropometry and the standard dimensions of school furniture. The standard seat height was not appropriate for students among different grades with the mismatch percentage ranging from 63.4% to 96.7% for Type I and 72.7% to 99.0% for Type II. For desk height, the standard dimensions were not appropriate for students among different grades with the mismatch percentage ranging from 32.3% to 88.9% for Type I and 67.7% to 99.0% for Type II. Apparently, the current standards are out of date and need to be updated. Four different sizes of school furniture were hence proposed to accommodate the variation in students' anthropometry from Grade 1 to Grade 6. The proposed standard dimensions (PrS) of school furniture cover a slightly broader range of age and present a higher cumulative fit than the current standard dimensions (CrS). In addition, a better strategy for sizing can be also developed to fit chairs and desks to a larger number of students. SN - 1872-9126 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/28411727/Evaluation_of_the_Indonesian_National_Standard_for_elementary_school_furniture_based_on_children's_anthropometry_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -