Introduction To Motor Skills & Abilities
Introduction To Motor Skills & Abilities
&
Abilities
EDU712
Skills Acquisition & Sports Management
Skills
According to Knapp (1963) Skills are the
learned ability to bring about predetermined
results with maximum certainty, often with
minimum outlay of time or energy
Addition, subtraction, multiplication & divide
are fundamental skills of mathematics
Playing with a keyboard is a skill
Playing with a ball is a skill.
Motor Skill
Motor skill have also been defined by
Argyle & Kendon (1967) as activities that
require a chain of sensory (vision, hearing,
touch, smell), central (brain and nervous
system), and motor mechanics whereby the
performer is able to maintain constant
control of sensory input and in accordance
with the goal of movement
Sports Skill
According to the Honeybourne (2006) skill in
sports has been classified into three categories:
Cognitive Skills
Perceptual Skills
Motor Skill
Cognitive Skills
It includes the intellectual skills of the athlete.
An athlete make decisions and problem solve.
Cognitive skills such as decision-making speed are
critical for a quaterback to make quick, effective
decision.
Perceptual Skill
It
includes
interpreting
and
integrating sensory information to
determine the best movement
outcome. Attention and previous
movement experiences also affect
perceptual skills.
Motor Skills
It includes the physical elements that enable the
movement.
To put simply, the activity could not be completed without the
learned ability to coordinate the limbs to produce the action.
Manipulative Skills
Single-Dimensional
Movement Precision
Environmental Predictability
Nature of skill
Multidimensional
Environmental Context
Action Requirement
Developmental Taxonomies
Non-locomotor Skills
Skills performed in place, without appreciable spatial movement
Examples:
Developmental Taxonomies
Locomotor Skills
Used to move the body from one place to another or to project the body upward
Examples:
Jumping,
Hopping
Running
Walking
Developmental Taxonomies
Manipulative Skills
Examples:
Kicking,
Striking,
Juggling
Developmental Taxonomies
Development Taxonomy progression for kicking a ball
Steps
Skills Execution
Single Dimensional
Movement Precision
Gross Motor Skills:
Kicking,
Striking,
Throwing.
Handwriting,
Typing,
Sewing.
Single Dimensional
Environmental Predictability
Closed Motor Skills:
The object to acted on does not change during the performance of a skill.
Examples:
During a rally, a beach volleyball player cannot stand on one spot he move according to
ball direction.
Single Dimensional
Nature of the skill
Discrete Motor Skill
The skill in which the beginning and end point are clearly defined.
Examples:
Throwing,
Kicking
Catching.
Examples:
Running,
Swimming,
Bicycling.
Single Dimensional
Nature of the skill
Serial Motor Skill
Multidimensional
Environmental Context
Regulatory Conditions:
Multidimensional
Action Requirements
Body orientation
Ability
Ability
Abilities are genetically predetermined characteristics
that affect movement performance such as agility,
coordination, strength, balance and flexibility.
Abilities are enduring and as such, difficult to change in
adults.
BALAN
CE
AGILIT
Y
FLEXIBIL
ITY
COORDINAT
ION
AGILITY
BALANCE
BALANCE
COORDINATION
COORDINATION
COORDINATION
Reference
Motor Learning and Development (2011) Pamela S. Haibach, Greg Reid, Douglas
H. Collier. Human Kinetics, US
Magil, R. A., (1998). Motor Learning: Concepts & Application. McGraw-Hill,
Singapore
Gallahue, D. L., & Ozmun, J. C., (2002). Understanding Motor Development:
Infants, children, Adolescence, Adults
http://stagesofskillacquisition.blogspot.com/
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