skill acquisition

Cards (79)

  • Motor or movement skill

    An action or task that has a goal and that requires voluntary body and/or limb movement to achieve the goal and is learned rather than being innate
  • Continuity of skills
    • Discrete
    • Serial
    • Continuous
  • Organisation of skills
    • High organisation
    • Low organisation
  • Skilled performers perform with seemingly effortless way
  • Motor or movement skill

    An action or task that has a goal and that requires voluntary body and/or limb movement to achieve the goal
  • Skilled performers know what they are trying to achieve and are often successful
  • Beginners/novices seem clumsy, slow, and lack control, tire quickly and expend more energy than necessary
  • Skills cannot be neatly labelled, best analysed using a scale or continuum
  • Factors affecting motor skills
    • Precision of movement
    • Definite beginning and end
    • Environmental effects
  • Simple skills

    Straightforward with hardly any judgements and decisions to make
  • Complex skills
    Involve many decisions to make
  • Complex skills
    • Slip catch in cricket, pass by a midfield player in hockey
  • Simple skills

    • Sprint start in swimming
  • Environmental influence on skills
    • Open skills (affected by environment, predominantly perceptual)
    • Closed skills (not affected by environment, predominantly habitual)
  • Pacing of skills
    • Self-paced (performer controls rate)
    • Externally paced (environment controls rate)
  • Self-paced skills

    • Javelin throw
  • Externally paced skills

    • Receiving a serve in badminton
  • Muscular involvement in skills
    • Gross skills (large muscle movements, not very precise)
    • Fine skills (small muscle movements, high precision)
  • Gross skill

    • Shot-put
  • Fine skill

    • Snooker shot
  • Continuity of skills
    • Discrete (clear beginning and end)
    • Serial (several discrete elements in a sequence)
    • Continuous (no obvious beginning or end)
  • Discrete skill

    • Penalty flick in hockey
  • Serial skill
    • Triple jump
  • Continuous skill

    • Cycling
  • Organisation of skills
    • High organisation (sub-routines difficult to separate)
    • Low organisation (sub-routines easily identified)
  • High organisation skill

    • Dribbling the ball in basketball
  • Low organisation skill
    • Tennis serve
  • Types of skills
    • Individual (no interaction with others)
    • Coactive (interaction with others but no direct opposition)
    • Interactive (direct interaction and opposition with others)
  • Individual skill
    • Netball catch
  • Interactive skill

    • Hockey penalty flick
  • Sub-routines
    The elements or components that make up a skill
  • Task analysis involves understanding what needs to be taught in a detailed way to develop a plan
  • Task analysis can reveal the specific abilities required for a particular skill and the sub-routines that make up the skill
  • Task analysis can help identify why a particular movement is not being fully executed and develop a strategy to eliminate the problem
  • Knowing how to classify skills
    • Helps to decide on the type of teaching/learning strategies that will optimise performance
    • Might be appropriate to split a skill up into its component parts (its sub-routines) if it is serial in nature
    • Might be appropriate to build strength of large muscles if the skill is predominantly gross in nature
    • Knowledge of the perceptual requirements of a skill will help the performer to take in the correct amount and type of information so that there is no attentional wastage
  • Closed skills
    Skills where the environment is constant, so they are better practised repetitively so that the skills become almost automatic
  • Open skills
    Skills where the environment is changing, so a variety of situations should be experienced so that the performer can create a number of different strategies to cope with the changing nature of the environment
  • Discrete skills
    Skills that are better taught as a whole rather than splitting them up into sub-routines
  • Serial skills
    Skills that are better taught by breaking them down into sub-routines, with each sub-routine learned fully before the skill is practised as a whole
  • Continuous skills

    Skills that are more effectively practised as a whole so that the kinaesthetic sense of the movement can be retained and the performer can feel the 'true nature' of the skill