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Getting Ready to Teach.  Psychomotor: what students can physically do and decisions about skills  Cognitive: what students know about skills, rules,

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Presentation on theme: "Getting Ready to Teach.  Psychomotor: what students can physically do and decisions about skills  Cognitive: what students know about skills, rules,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Getting Ready to Teach

2

3  Psychomotor: what students can physically do and decisions about skills  Cognitive: what students know about skills, rules, strategy  Affective: how students behave during physical activity and how they feel about activity

4  Develop learning experiences that integrate or focus on all three learning domains whenever possible

5  The L. E. must have the potential to improve the motor performance/activity skills of students.  The L. E. must provide maximal activity or practice time for all students at an appropriate level of ability.

6  The L.E. must be appropriate for the experiential level of all students.  The L.E. should have the potential to integrate psychomotor, affective, and cognitive educational goals whenever possible.

7  The Psychomotor Domain: teaching motor skills, movements, manipulative skills, and fitness necessary to competent movers (NASPE Standard 1)  Competence is defined as skillful enough to enjoy participation. That means competence is different for each student

8  Open Skills: regulated by changing events in the environment  Examples: ??  Closed Skills: environmental conditions are relatively stable  Examples??

9 Closed Skills Open Skills Basketball Golf Putt Tennis BB Foul Shot Forehand Jump Shot

10  Closed before open Environment is easier to handle Fewer variables to teach to Easier to focus on skill acquisition Attempting to get students to produce consistent skill performances  Open: Once consistent increase the level of complexity

11  Cognitive Stage:  Learner uses information on skill performance to develop a motor plan.  Thought processes are heavily involved as learner consciously attends to task.  Student uses a high degree of concentration to perform the skill.

12  Associative Stage:  Learners concentrate on temporal patterns and refinement of mechanics.  Complex skills have learners at this stage for long periods of time.  Feedback is helpful at this stage.  Learner can begin to attend to the environment.

13  Automatic Stage:  Learner can perform automatically.  Movement itself does not require cognitive attention.  Performance is consistent.  Performance can adapt to the environmental requirements.

14  Prerequisites: Learner must have prerequisite skills in order to learn new skills.  Clear idea of the task: Learner must have a motor program for executing the skill.

15  Motivational/Attentional Disposition to the Skill: Learners must be actively engaged and find the learning meaningful in some way.

16  Practice: Motor performance is usually inconsistent and variable.  Opportunities to respond

17  Feedback: This can help with error detection. Feedback also maintains motivation and focus of the task.

18  Be ready for Lab 1 (pip packet page 31- 33)which will happen in the gymnasium (wear tennis shoes)  Read Ch 1-2 if you haven’t done so already. Begin to think about this material with regard to teaching students motor skills in physical education


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