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Understanding Children’s and Readiness for Physical Activity

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Presentation on theme: "Understanding Children’s and Readiness for Physical Activity"— Presentation transcript:

1 Understanding Children’s and Readiness for Physical Activity
Chapter 2

2 Children’s shared needs:
Movement Success and approval Peer acceptance and approval Cooperate and compete

3 Children’s shared needs:
Physical competency Adventure and novelty Creative satisfaction Rhythmic expression To know

4 Motor Skills Skill that requires the effective use of skeletal muscles
Generally developed in childhood and expanded to more complex skills as one moves throughout the lifespan

5 Motor Skill Development
Fine motor skills – hands, hand-eye coordination Gross motor skills - large muscles of the body

6 Physical Development K-2 3-6
Fine motor skills are low=avoid throwing, catching small fast objects 20-30 seconds of activity Students like to move to rhythm and 3-6 Become interested in sports Hand-eye coordination is developing – use soft objects

7 Cognitive Development
K-2 Can understand simple directions and rules Get off task easily so change activities Allow students show creativity 3-6 Attention span increase so can add more steps/rules to activity Need specific rules to follow Like to work in small groups

8 Social Development K-2 3-6 Boys and girls have similar interests
Want to please the teacher Want others to know they can do the activity 3-6 Want to do movement well Don’t want to lose

9 Gender Considerations
Boys and girls have similar amounts of bone and muscle mass through early primary grades At preadolescence, boys and girls begin to experience physical differences

10 Cognitive Implications
4-7 year olds can focus only on one aspect of a skill at a time Most successful at low complexity skills 7-11 year olds develop ability to problem solve

11 Affective Implications
Play is important to children Has an influence on self-esteem If children believe they can do the skill, they are more likely to participate

12 Practice Progressions
Developmental Readiness – Having attained the age, fitness, and skill levels required to perform a particular activity Partner Individual Exploration Large-group Cooperative Activity Small-sized Group Activity


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