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Soskin, Beedee – 1976
The teacher working with handicapped children should use play and recreation experiences both to teach necessary concepts and for fun. Motor activities should be sequenced from the simple to the complex. Principles of child development should be applied to help the child learn about his body, learn basic concepts, and accomplish motor patterns.…
Descriptors: Exceptional Child Education, Handicapped Children, Motor Development, Play
Getman, G. N. – Academic Therapy, 1983
The author criticizes the lack of opportunity given to children to learn the motor patterns involved in handwriting and describes a sequence of chalkboard activities to promote the perceptual motor skills required. Illustrations of the sequence are provided. (CL)
Descriptors: Disabilities, Elementary Education, Handwriting, Motor Development
Featheringham, Richard D. – Balance Sheet, 1973
Selected factors of practice promoting typewriting skill are: practice is no guarantee of learning; nonrepetitive practice is better than repetitive; mentally rehearsing a skill task is beneficial; little or no improvement takes place without knowledge of results, and; plateaus in motor skill learning may be indicative of practice limit.…
Descriptors: Business Education, Business Skills, Motor Development, Skill Development
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Schworm, Ronald W. – Teaching Exceptional Children, 1977
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Handicapped Children, Motor Development, Task Analysis
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Ziegler, Susan G. – Journal of Physical Education, Recreation & Dance, 2002
Reviews traditional approaches to teaching motor skills and introduces the concept of stimulus cuing, a model of attentional focus, and the importance of attentional shifting, also discussing factors that interfere with a performer's ability to focus attention and making suggestions regarding how to use attentional focusing as an effective…
Descriptors: Attention, Cues, Elementary Secondary Education, Motor Development
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Rink, Judith E.; Hall, Tina J. – Elementary School Journal, 2008
The perspective of this article is that the purpose of the elementary physical education program is the development of a physically active lifestyle. We discuss the relative contribution of the development of motor skills, fitness, content related to encouraging participation, and the affective goals of the program to the development of a…
Descriptors: Physical Education, Teacher Effectiveness, Time on Task, Motor Development
McKinney, E. Doris – Journal of Physical Education and Recreation, 1977
The purpose of this article is to share with teachers selected information from the literature of motor learning which may stimulate thinking and generate interest in research on the questions pertinent to the problem of teaching game skills. (JD)
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Learning, Motor Development, Physical Activities
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Withers, Alma F. – Journal of Physical Education, Recreation & Dance, 1984
Clogging is a rhythmic dance that children enjoy watching and doing. This article discusses the history of clogging and suggests eight basic steps to be used in the physical education class. Clogging resources are included. (DF)
Descriptors: Dance Education, Elementary Education, Folk Culture, History
Kovitz, Valerie S. – Academic Therapy, 1980
The article suggests activities to help learning disabled children develop awareness of the differences between right and left. Techniques for combining movement, language, and sensory skills as well as for using musical, visual, and tactile stimuli are described. (CL)
Descriptors: Learning Activities, Learning Disabilities, Motor Development, Perceptual Motor Coordination
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Marlowe, Mike – Teaching Exceptional Children, 1980
Games analysis process is a process whereby teachers of handicapped students can design games to accommodate individual motoric differences, as well as to promote specific behavioral outcomes such as cooperation. (SBH)
Descriptors: Disabilities, Elementary Secondary Education, Emotional Development, Games
Hick, Sandra – Journal of Physical Education and Recreation, 1979
The successful development of a basic movement program depends on the teacher's ability to recognize and to work effectively with varying levels of student motor and cognitive proficiency. (LH)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Curriculum Development, Curriculum Guides, Gymnastics
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Williams, Kathleen – Journal of Physical Education, Recreation & Dance (JOPERD), 2004
Through the study of motor development, the physically educated person will understand that individuals develop at their own rate and require both time and practice to acquire new motor skills. The physically educated person needs to know about motor development in order to monitor his or her own change and become an independent learner.…
Descriptors: Physical Education, Motor Development, Psychomotor Skills, Cognitive Development
Cooper, Margaret L. – 1969
At the Edna A. Hill Preschool Laboratories at the University of Kansas, children between the ages of two and five are being taught two kinds of precise skills, some to prepare them for the academic world and others to enable them to care for themselves more independently. Behavior analysis and application of reinforcement principles make earlier…
Descriptors: Films, Mechanical Skills, Motor Development, Preschool Children
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Weiss, Maureen R.; Klint, Kimberley A. – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 1987
Examines developmental differences of modeling and verbal rehearsal on children's performance of a sequential motor task. Results indicate that for facilitating motor skill acquisition in elementary school children verbal rehearsal strategies may be needed to supplement a visual model to help them selectively attend to relevant task components and…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Instructional Effectiveness, Modeling (Psychology), Motor Development
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Moon, M. Sherril; Renzaglia, Adelle – Journal of Special Education, 1982
The state of the art in physical fitness training for mentally retarded (MR) persons is analyzed. Research topics covered included fitness level of MR persons, relationships of fitness to other variables, strategies for improving fitness, evaluation techniques and curriculum programs, skill sequences, fitness training preference evaluation,…
Descriptors: Curriculum, Mental Retardation, Motor Development, Physical Fitness
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