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Introduction to Motor Development. Human behavior is not compartmentalized; there is a complex system of constant, reciprocal exchanges among an individual’s cognitive, affective, motor, and physical being. Motor Development.
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Human behavior is not compartmentalized; there is a complex system of constant, reciprocal exchanges among an individual’s cognitive, affective, motor, and physical being
Motor Development • Development--identifiable, progressive flowof changes which are psychological, social, emotional, physical • Developmental psychology • Ontogeny--long term change over the lifespan • Differentiation--becoming something different • Learning--acquisition of knowledge, experience and its application; change in behavior; generation of neural pathways or programs • Experimental psychology • Short term change
Motor Development (continued) • Evolution--specific change of species according to the environment (generation to generation) • Phylogeny • Maturation--physical and mental growth and development defined in terms of a definitive time period • Growth--change over time, aging process, change to mature state, acquisition of skills, knowledge, coordination • Change in physical size
Introduction to Motor Development • All five of these previous definitions tend to overlap; often maturation, growth, and development don't include environmental factors • What is Motor Development? • Clark & Whitall (1989)-Describes the lawful changes in motor skill behavior across the lifespan • Consider the product--end result; task oriented approach • Consider the process--what occurs duringthe movement; process oriented approach • Consider factors affecting changes • Past, present, future
Motor Development • Working definition for this text • Motor development is the study of changes in human motor behavior over the lifespan, the processes that underlie these changes, and the factors that affect them
Defining Motor Development Identify similarities and differences between motor development and the following phenomena. Motor learning Motor control Physical growth and maturation
Characteristics of Motor Development Involves change in movement behavior Is sequential, age-related, continuous Depends on underlying processes
Related Areas of Study Motor learning: relatively permanent gains in motor skill capability associated with practice or experience Motor control: the neural, physical, and behavioral aspects of movement
Brief History of Motor Development • Precursor Period (late 1700's-1928) • Descriptive observation • Darwin (1787) • Tiedemann (1877) • Maturational Period (1928-1946) • Biological processes--description of processes, and product • Gesell (1928) • McGraw (1935)-Johnny & Jimmy • Bayley (1936)-Motor Development Scale
Normative/Descriptive Period (1946-70) • Anthropometric Measurement • Development of Standardized Norms • Product Oriented • Glassow, Espenschade, Rarick • Process Oriented Period (1970-present) • Concern for processes underlying development • Perception, information processing • Coordination, dynamical systems, lifespan perspective • Film analysis, biomechanics
Research Designs in Motor Development • Cross Sectional Design--study different age groups at the same time period with the same measure • Easy, efficient, quick results • Assumes age causes changes, rather than behavior • Longitudinal Design--study one group of subjects at different ages and different times of measurement • Time consuming, costly • Subject loss over time; test sensitive • Examines change in behavior
Mixed Longitudinal Design (time lag or sequential) • Combines two designs to utilize the advantages of both • Problems with designs • Chronological age (CD & LD) • Cohort Effects--experiences one brings to testing based upon time raised (CD) • Time of Measurement (LD) • Pros and cons of designs
Bloom's Taxonomy (1956)--Three Interactive Domains (Fig. 1-2, p. 6) • Cognitive Domain--one's intellect (Piaget) • Affective Domain--social & emotional • Motor Domain--human movement, our focus • Payne & Isaacs added the physical domain
Why study motor development? • Study of normal development allows one to identify problems or delayed development • Improve motor performance • Curriculum development; developmentally appropriate activities
Common Motor Development Terms • Direction of Development • Cephalocaudal--from head to tail;growth • Head size in infants • Walking • Proximodistal--from close to body to farther out; prenatal growth • Reaching and grasping • Differentiation & Integration • Differentiation refers to the process of moving from gross control of movements to fine precise control of movements • Integration refers to the ability of the system to function together as a unit; coordination
Types of Movements • Gross movements--controlled by large muscles (walking, hopping, jumping) • Fine movements--controlled by small muscles (typing, writing, drawing, sewing) • Skill like throwing involves both • Fine motor ability develops with maturation • Terms for Age Periods throughout Lifespan • Divisions are not always accurate because they are based on CHRONOLOGICAL age
Chronological Age--length of time from birth • Developmental Age--takes into account rate of maturation • Stages or Phases of Development--Do they exist? • Roberton--in order to be a it stage" then there must be some hierarchial, qualitative change in human movement • Unique from all other stages • Possess common characteristics in one stage • Invariant order in all individuals • Often used for ease of description
Other Considerations • Why consider a lifespan perspective? • Number of people over the age of 65 continues to increase • Allows us to study both progressive and regressive phases of development • Intrinsic and extrinsic factors • Dynamical Systems Perspective • Movement is a product of the whole system which is constantly interacting and changing • Walking • Neural Perspective vs. Dynamical Systems
Since 1900, US population statistics show 3 times more people over age 65 8 times more people age 65-74 16 times more people age 75-84 31 times more people over 85 Lifespan perspective Offers the opportunity to examine a broader ranges of change processes Current Trends
Constraints Limit or discourage certain movements Permit or encourage other movements “Shape” movement
Individual Constraints Inside the body (internal) Structural constraints: related to the body’s structure Height Muscle mass Functional constraints: related to behavioral function Attention Motivation
Environmental Constraints Outside the body: properties of the world around us Global, not task specific Physical Gravity Surfaces Sociocultural Gender roles Cultural norms
Task Constraints External to the body Related specifically to tasks or skills Goal of task Rules guiding task performance Equipment