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Motor Skills

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... foot co-ordination activities (kicking), ball activities (throwing and catching) ... soccer. Run, dodge, kick, vertical jump (field players) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Motor Skills


1
Motor Skills Perceptual Motor Programs
  • EPC252, Semester 2

2
Why are Motor Skills Important?
  • PE Prostituted editorial by Jeff Walkley
  • (from The ACHPER Healthy Lifestyle Journal,
    1995)

3
So why is this area an issue?
  • Failure breeds failure, avoidance rejection,
    therefore, we need to focus on grades K-3 to
    develop
  • success competence in motor skills,
  • experimentation in motor skills,
  • acceptance

4
Why K-3?
  • GRADE 1 children who are 5/6/7 years of age
    have the neurological anatomical ability to
    develop skills in ALL fundamental motor skills
  • GRADE 4 children have established their belief
    in physical activity sport

5
What are Motor Skills?
  • Motor skills
  • Fundamental skills
  • Fundamental motor skills
  • DIFFERENT TERMS, SAME THING!!
  • Brainstorm a definition examples.

6
What are Motor Skills?
  • Fundamental skills are those utilitarian skills
    that children need for living being (Pangrazi
    Dauer, 1992, p. 291)
  • Fundamental motor skills (FMS) are the
    foundation movements or precursor patterns to
    more specialised, complex skills in games,
    sports, dance, aquatics, gymnastics and
    recreational activities (DECCD, 1997, p. 4)
  • Current research indicates that the current level
    of FMS development in a childs early years is
    inadequate

7
What are Motor Skills cont.
  • Early development of FMS is an important step
    towards ensuring an individuals involvement in
    physical activity is lifelong, safe and healthy
  • Without competence in a range of skills such as
    running, skipping and balancing, students are
    less likely to access the range of options
    available to establish an active lifestyle
    (DECCD, 1997)
  • Research has indicated that the improvements in
    self esteem and confidence that are associated
    with a sound development in FMS has a flow on
    effect to other areas of a childs education
    (DECCD, 1997)

8
3 Motor Skill Categories
  • Locomotor
  • Nonlocomotor (body management)
  • Manipulative

9
Locomotor Skills
  • Are used to move the body from 1 place to another
    or to project the body upward, eg. walking,
    skipping, jumping landing, hopping, running,
    leaping, galloping, dodging
  • Form the foundation of gross motor coordination
    involve large muscle movement

10
Nonlocomotor or Body Management Skills
  • Are performed without appreciable movement from
    place to place, eg. bending, stretching, pushing
    pulling, twisting turning, balancing,
    rolling

11
Manipulative Skills
  • Are involved when a child handles some object
  • Usually involve the hands feet but other parts
    of the body can also be used
  • Leads to better hand-eye foot-eye coordination
  • Form the foundation for many game skills
  • Eg. catching, throwing, striking, dribbling,
    kicking

12
Pyramid of Skill Attainment
Higher Skill Attainment
Specialised Skills
Fundamental Skills
Body Management Competence
13
Tasmanian FMS booklet
  • 1997
  • Developed by Tasmanian teachers

14
How long to develop motor skill proficiency?
  • Brainstorm - how long do you think (in minutes)?
  • Task team writing of name
  • Task paper throw
  • Too Much Too Quickly by Jeff Walkley
  • (from The ACHPER Healthy Lifestyle Journal, 1995)

15
How can we teach FMS?
  • PMP
  • Skills approach
  • Thematic approach
  • Games Sense or TGfU
  • Sport Education
  • THROUGH
  • Daily PE
  • USING
  • Tasmanian FMS booklet

16
Before he can learn that p is down and b is
up, he must learn when he is down and when he is
up. Directionality must become a part of the
body scheme before any child can have a real
appreciation of the directionality of letters,
numbers and words. (Capon, 1975)
17
Perceptual Motor Programs
  • Fundamental motor skills have been developed as
    an integral component of the HPE curriculum.
  • Traditional P.E programs have centred on the
    output or performance e.g. Can the child skip?
    With perceptual motor programs, input and
    perception are the first concern, then you
    examine how it effects ones performance.
  • PMPs aim to be preventative rather than
    curative.
  • PMPs should involve all students in their early
    years of schooling, not just children who are at
    risk

18
What is Perceptual Motor Development ?
  • Perceptual motor development is defined as ones
    ability to receive, interpret and respond
    successfully to sensory information
  • Perception means to know or to interpret
    information, and motor refers to output or
    responsive movement
  • (Capon, 1975)
  • A perceptual motor program, therefore, uses
    movement activities to enhance academic or
    cognitive skills

19
The Importance of PMPs
  • 2 main reasons
  • The influence PMP can have on non-impaired
    children (Learning Readiness)
  • The influence of PMP on children requiring
    remedial programs for PM skills (Remediation)
  • Readiness programs are preventative programs,
    that is why they are so important in every
    schools early grade curriculum.

20
What is Involved in a PMP?
  • Gross motor activities (locomotor)
  • Vestibular activities
  • Visual motor activities (Manipulative)
  • Auditory motor activities
  • Tactile activities
  • Lateralisation activities
  • Body awareness
  • Spatial awareness

21
Gross Motor Activities
  • Rolling, crawling, walking, running, jumping and
    landing, hopping, skipping, galloping, leaping
    and dodging.

22
Vestibular Activities
  • Rolling (over balls), forward and backward rolls,
    spinning, balance, scooter boards, skipping (with
    and without ropes), jumping activities, see saws
    and trampettes.
  • The vestibular centre in the brain receives and
    processes sensations from the gravity and
    movement receptors found in the inner ears. This
    information is used to regulate muscle tone,
    equilibrium and posture and allows people to know
    how fast they are moving and in which direction.

23
Visual Motor Activities
  • Eye-hand co-ordination (striking), eye-foot
    co-ordination activities (kicking), ball
    activities (throwing and catching).
  • Temporal awareness (developing an internal time
    structure).

24
Auditory Motor Activities
  • Singing, rhymes and chants.
  • Responding to auditory cues/commands, ability to
    utilise auditory cues.

25
Tactile Activities
  • Massage.
  • Direct touch.
  • Rolling.

26
Lateralisation Activities
  • Ability to control two sides of the body together
    or separately.
  • Bilateral movements (Simultaneous or parallel).
  • Unilateral movements (one side of the body)
  • Cross lateral movements (Simultaneous movement of
    different limbs on opposite sides of the body
    e.g. crawling)
  • Directional awareness.

27
Recognising Children at Risk
  • Children who often go unnoticed are those who try
    very hard with little success.
  • Children with poor muscle tone or poor posture.
  • Children with co-ordination problems, who appear
    clumsy, unable to run easily, often have falls.
  • (ANSUA, 1991)

28
Children at Risk cont.
  • Children who display poor fine motor
    co-ordination, have problems with all manual
    skills such as managing buttons, pencil grip,
    avoiding colouring activities, dislikes jigsaws
    and trouble managing scissors.
  • Children who display a difficulty in expressing
    themselves properly (poor speech, stuttering)

29
Children at Risk cont.
  • Children who demonstrate difficulty with spatial
    awareness and poor visual perception. They may
    avoid using playground equipment to avoid
    climbing, swinging and heights.
  • Children with mixed laterality. Children who may
    write with their left hand but prefer to hop on
    their right leg.
  • Children who display an under-developed tactile
    system or a hyper-tactile child.

30
Children at Risk cont.
  • Children with sensory input problems I.e cannot
    filter out irrelevant sounds and stimuli, easily
    distracted, talk loudly to drown out background
    noise.
  • Children with poor eye contact.
  • Children with immature head movement development
    e.g moves their head while reading instead of
    moving their eyes or jerky head movement while
    reading.

31
Children at Risk cont.
  • Children with poor visual memory.
  • Children who have a poor auditory memory I.e can
    only handle one command at a time.
  • Children with visual problems squints, red
    rimmed eyes, headaches, watery eyes following
    reading, book close to eyes when reading and
    inability to cope with small print.
  • Reversals with letters and numbers.

32
Children at Risk cont.
  • Children with poor concentration and learning
    ability leads to poor comprehension e.g can read
    well but demonstrates little comprehension.
  • Children who demonstrate poor time concepts e.g
    unaware of lunch time and dinner time, yesterday
    and tomorrow.
  • Children who display midline problems. Children
    who have not integrated both sides of their body
    e.g may be ambidextrous, writing hand may change,
    when writing across one side of the page then
    moves the paper so they do not cross the midline.

33
Improving Literacy Through Motor Development
  • PMPs have been shown to be an avenue to which
    the perceptual abilities of a child may be
    enhanced. There has been research conducted that
    demonstrates that improved perceptual motor
    development can positively affect a childs
    academic performance.

34
Skills Approach
  • Focus your teaching on the skill
  • Drill, practice, modified games
  • Non-dominant side practice
  • PE homework
  • Profile skill achievement of students

35
Thematic Approach
  • Propulsion
  • Overhand throw, kick, bounce
  • Reception
  • Catch
  • Striking
  • Forehand strike, 2-hand strike
  • Locomotion
  • Run, leap, dodge, vertical jump

36
Games Sense or TGfU
  • Teach games, dont TAKE games!
  • Select a series of modified games that allow
    students to practice FMS
  • Eg. Dodge
  • Octopus tag, line tag, relays

37
Sport Education
  • Involves extended lessons on the same sport
    (usually a term)
  • Involves students acting as coaches, umpires,
    scorers
  • Eg. soccer
  • Run, dodge, kick, vertical jump (field players)
  • Catch, leap, kick, overhand throw (goalie)

38
References
  • ANSUA. (1991). Movement for learning. Motor
    sensory
  • therapy. Victoria author.
  • Capon, J. (1975). Perceptual motor development.
    Belmont,
  • Ca. Fearon Pitman.
  • DECCD. (1997). Fundamental motor skills.
    Tasmania
  • author.
  • Pangrazi, R. P., Dauer, V. P. (1992). Dynamic
    physical
  • education for elementary school children (10th
    ed.). Ontario Macmillan.
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