Life Span Motor Development / Edition 6

Life Span Motor Development / Edition 6

by Kathleen M. Haywood, Nancy Getchell
ISBN-10:
1450456995
ISBN-13:
9781450456999
Pub. Date:
07/16/2014
Publisher:
Human Kinetics Publishers
ISBN-10:
1450456995
ISBN-13:
9781450456999
Pub. Date:
07/16/2014
Publisher:
Human Kinetics Publishers
Life Span Motor Development / Edition 6

Life Span Motor Development / Edition 6

by Kathleen M. Haywood, Nancy Getchell
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Overview

Life Span Motor Development, Sixth Edition With Web Study Guide, uses the model of constraints in discussing reasons for changes in movement throughout the life span, Focusing on assessment more heavily than previous editions, this updated edition encourages students to examine how the interactions of the individual, environment, and task bring about changes in a person’s movements. The principles of motor development are presented in an accessible manner so that even readers with minimal movement science background will comprehend the material.

A key component of the sixth edition is an improved web study guide featuring revised lab activities and better functionality. New to this edition, lab activity record sheets and questions are available as fillable documents so that students can complete and submit them electronically, resulting in increased efficiency and reduced paperwork for instructors. In several labs, guided assessments teach students to observe video and categorize movements accurately. These assessments cue students to look at particular parts of the movement and guide students through questions, answers, and feedback. Then students are provided opportunities for unguided assessments via video clips or live observation, putting into practice what they have learned in the guided assessments. There are also over 100 new video clips in the web study guide, including a comprehensive video diary of the motor development milestones in the first nine months of a baby’s life.

Life Span Motor Development, Sixth Edition, contains several other updates that are appealing to instructors and students alike:

• A new full-color interior provides for a more engaging presentation of the material.

• Updated research includes Generation R studies and connections to fitness and motor skills.

• An updated presentation package and image bank, plus a test package and chapter quizzes, are included.

• An instructor guide includes recommendations on using the lab activities in the web study guide both in and out of class.

• Multiple learning exercises that were previously part of the web resource have been moved to the book to allow the video-rich lab activities to occupy students’ learning time when they are online

As in past editions, students understand how maturational age and chronological age are distinct and how functional constraints affect motor skill development and learning. It also covers normal and abnormal developmental issues across the full life span, especially in the formative years. The text shows how the four components of physical fitness—cardiorespiratory endurance, strength, flexibility, and body composition—interact to affect a person’s movements over the life span. It also describes how relevant social, cultural, psychosocial, and cognitive influences can affect a person’s movements. Significant updates focus on assessment, including new figures that help to explain in detail the functional constraints approach to assessment.

Life Span Motor Development, Sixth Edition, not only provides students with the observational skills necessary for assessing motor development, but it also expertly ties the information to real life. The text continues to emphasize the application of motor development concepts to the real world by beginning each chapter with an example of a common experience and then revisiting that experience at the end of the chapter, allowing readers to apply the material to the example. The book also retains the objectives; running glossary; and key points, sidebars, and application questions throughout each chapter.

Life Span Motor Development, Sixth Edition, encompasses the most current research in motor development. It is enhanced with practical online resources for instructors and students, making the concepts of motor development come alive. The text gives students a solid foundation not only for beginning their studies in motor development but also for applying the concepts to real-world situations.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781450456999
Publisher: Human Kinetics Publishers
Publication date: 07/16/2014
Edition description: Sixth Edition
Pages: 448
Product dimensions: 8.60(w) x 11.30(h) x 1.00(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Kathleen M. Haywood, PhD, is a professor and associate dean for academic programs at the University of Missouri at St. Louis, where she has researched life span motor development and taught courses in motor behavior and development, sport psychology, and biomechanics. She earned her PhD in motor behavior from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 1976.

Haywood is a fellow of the National Academy of Kinesiology and the Research Consortium of the Society for Health and Physical Education (SHAPE). She is also a recipient of SHAPE’s Mabel Lee Award. Haywood has served as president of the North American Society for the Psychology of Sport and Physical Activity and as chairperson of the Motor Development Academy of SHAPE.

Haywood is also the coauthor of four editions of Archery: Steps to Success and of Teaching Archery: Steps to Success, published by Human Kinetics. She resides in Saint Charles, Missouri, and in her free time enjoys fitness training, tennis, and dog training.

Nancy Getchell, PhD, is an associate professor at the University of Delaware in Newark. For nearly 30 years, Getchell has investigated developmental motor control and coordination in children with and without disabilities. She teaches courses in motor development, motor control and learning, research methods, and women in sport.

Getchell is a professional member of the North American Society for the Psychology of Sport and Physical Activity, the International Society of Motor Control, and the International Society for Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity. She is a research fellow for the Research Consortium of the American Alliance for Health, Physical Education, Recreation and Dance (AAHPERD). From 2005 to 2009, Getchell served as editor for the Growth and Motor Development section of Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport. Getchell has also served as the chairperson of the AAHPERD Motor Development and Learning Academy.

Getchell obtained her PhD from the University of Wisconsin at Madison in 1996 in kinesiology with a specialization in motor development. In 2001, Getchell was the recipient of the Lolas E. Halverson Young Investigators Award in motor development.

Getchell resides in Wilmington, Delaware, where she enjoys hiking, geocaching, and bicycling.

Read an Excerpt


Chapter 1: The Developmental Perspective



Learning and performing motor skills is a lifelong challenge. The process begins early in life with the attainment of postural control and grasping skills. continues with the acquisition of locomotor skills and manipulative skills, such as throwing. During childhood, basic skills are refined and combined . to movement sequences to produce complex skills. Adolescents continue acquire movement sequences and improve their abilities to match motor skills to the goal of a task and the environment in which it is performed. Throughout infancy, childhood, and adolescence, the physical body is growing and maturing. Perception of the surrounding world becomes keener, and rental capacity increases as mental skills improve. Social skills, too, are acquired as new relationships are formed. With all these changes, the performance of motor skills must be accommodated and modified.

Motor skills are usually perfected during late adolescence and young adulthood. Elite athletes exemplify the ultimate in motor skill development. Such ,killed performers have maximized their motor performance based on their physical size and condition and their cognitive and social experiences. Developmental changes are most dramatic early in life, but they do not cease with adulthood-physiological changes continue to occur, and environmental ..experiences refine individuals' perceptions, mental skills, and social relation ships. Perhaps adults attempt to perform skills in new ways, but both new and well-learned skills must continue to accommodate these ongoing, though subtle, changes. This is particularly true as individuals age beyond young adulthood, and the pace of physical, mental, and social changes increases.


The Life Span Perspective

Movement patterns change continually over the life span. This ongoing change poses important questions for educators. For example, what influences the potential for skilled performance? Is it determined by genetics, or can parents and educators provide experiences to promote skill development? Does skilled performance necessarily decline after young adulthood? By studying the developmental process with its many facets and intricacies, we can begin to unravel the answers to questions such as these.


CONCEPT 1.1

Motor performance undergoes many age-related charges during an individual's life span.


Traditional Focus on Children

It is traditional to think of solely as the process of skill acquisition in children-that is, the progression from unskilled performance in very young children to intermediate skill mastery during childhood, to relatively skilled performance during late adolescence. Working from this perspective, a motor developmentalist studies motor behavior by testing children of different ages and monitoring the course of their skill acquisition. The presumption that motor development concerns only children and adolescents has developed because the majority of study in motor development has concentrated on the early years of the life span. But researchers now recognize that the study of development in general and motor development in particular should encompass the entire life span. By studying the processes underlying behavioral change throughout the life span, motor developmentalists seek not only to describe such changes but also to explain them.


In this text, the field of motor development concerns the study of processes underlying behavioral change throughout the life span.

Increasing Interest in Older Adults

A growing segment of the human population consists of older adults. Increasingly, older adults seek to improve the quality of their lives through healthful and enjoyable physical activities, so we can no longer view older adulthood as a period of sedentary living and illness. We recognize that development does not stop at puberty with the cessation of physical growth, or at age 21, or at any other landmark of young adulthood. Changes in motor behavior, both substantive and qualitative, occur during older adulthood, too. Motor patterns vary with age from birth to death (VanSant, 1989). Because the earliest developmental research focused on children's motor behavior, many aspects of motor behavior in older adults are largely unexplored, and specific scientific knowledge of changes in motor skill is sparse. Gaining more complex knowledge and a better understanding of motor behavior in older adults is an important challenge for motor developmentalists.

Significance of the Life Span Perspective

Students-even those who anticipate working only with children or adolescents-can gain a fuller appreciation of motor development by viewing it from a life span perspective. Consider, for example, that children and older adults often display similar motor behavior. Both groups are relatively slower than young adults in their reaction time to a visual stimulus (see Figure 1.1). But are the causes of this difference in behavior the same for children and older adults? No. Children and older adults cognitively process information about the visual stimulus in different ways. We will discuss differential causes of behavior in more detail throughout the text.


Behavior is the product of many influences.

Our understanding of behavior is based on the integration of many influences-psychological, sociological, biological, physiological, cognitive, mechanical, and so on. Similarly, our greatest understanding of motor development is based on the integration of many behavior changes within a phase of development. We cannot possibly study all behavioral influences at once. Even though the discussions in this text may focus for a time on a particular aspect of behavioral change, the goal of developmentalists is to explain behavioral change throughout life from a global viewpoint. We encounter a broader range of causes and effects from this viewpoint, which in turn provides the basis for a more complete understanding of the factors involved in behavioral changes. More importantly, perhaps, a life span perspective ,enables students of motor development to better understand motor behavior and to consider ow educators and health professionals might be able to influence individuals' optimal motor development throughout life.

REVIEW 1.1

In discussing motor development in this text, we emphasize a life span perspective that relates to the processes underlying changes in motor behavior throughout life. The study of motor development involves both the description and the explanation of changes in motor behavior. Ultimately, motor developmentalists integrate knowledge of various biological, psychological, sociological, cognitive, and mechanical factors that influence behavior at particular levels of development. This method is quite different from studying changes as a function of time, such as when we study a particular motor behavior in several age groups to identify the differences among those groups or to establish norms or averages for particular ages. Developmentalists go beyond this descriptive level to study the processes underlying change that account for age-group differences.

Because changes in motor behavior occur from infancy through older adulthood, we must consider a broad range of influences on behavioral change. Consequently, we view motor skill development with a knowledge of preceding processes as well as potential effects.

Terminology In Motor Development

Understanding the terms used in the study of the developmental process will facilitate your learning. Every field of study develops its own terminology. Sometimes these terms hinder students' ability to read and comprehend pertinent literature, especially students new to the field. It can be frustrating to discover that a word you use in everyday conversation has a specific, different meaning when used in a scientific context. Yet precise communication among those interested in the topic often requires these specific meanings. Let's examine some common motor development terms.


CONCEPT 1.2

To understand motor development, you must understand the terminology used in the field.


Growth and Development

Two basic concepts discussed in this text focus on the terms growth and development.

Growth

Although growth and development are sometimes used interchangeably, growth means a quantitative increase in size. With physical growth, the increase in size or body mass results from an increase in complete biological units that is, already-formed body parts (Timiras, 1972). This means that growth in height, for example, does not occur by adding a new section to each leg; rather, the legs, as biological units or body parts, grow longer. When each unit or part increases its size as a whole, the body increases its size, keeping its form.

Sometimes growth also is used to refer to an increase in the magnitude of intellectual ability or in social aptitudes (Rogers, 1982). In this text, however, we use the term to refer to physical growth, not social or cognitive growth. The physical growth period (change in absolute size) for humans is typically between conception and ages 19 to 22.

Development

As a complement to growth, development implies a continuous process of change leading to a state of organized and specialized functional capacity-that is, a state wherein an individual can fully carry out an intended role (Timiras, 1972). Development may occur in the form of quantitative change, qualitative change, or both. Motor development, then, is the sequential, continuous age-related process whereby an individual progresses from simple movements to highly organized, complex motor skills, and finally to the adjustment of skills that accompanies aging. This process is not limited to the physical growth period; development continues throughout a person's life.

Motor Development

The term motor, when used with other terms such as development and learning, refers to movement. Hence, motor learning deals with aspects of learning involving body movement and is not necessarily age-related. In discussions of both the development and learning of movement, the term motor behavior is often used. Newcomers to the study of motor development often find it difficult to distinguish between motor development and motor learning. Roberton (1988, p. 130) suggests we apply three questions to make this distinction:

1. What is behavior like now, and why?

2. What was behavior like before, and

3. How is behavior going to change in the

Specialists in both motor learning and motor development ask the first question, but only the developmentalist goes on to ask the second and third questions. The motor learning specialist studies motor behavior in the short term, as a function of practice of a certain skill or the instructional strategies used by teachers. The developmentalist is interested in present behavior only as a point on a continuum of change.

Maturation

Another term often used along with growth is maturation or, more specifically, physiological or physical maturation. Physical maturation is a qualitative advancement in biological makeup and may refer to cell, organ, or system advancement in biochemical composition rather than to size alone (Teeple, 1978). Typically, maturation connotes progress toward physical maturity, which is the state of optimal functional integration of an individual's body systems and the ability to reproduce.

Aging

Physiological changes occur throughout life, although these changes take place much more slowly after the physical growth period. The term aging used broadly, applies to the process of growing older regardless of chronological age. More specifically, physical aging refers to continuing molecular, cellular, and organismic differentiation. Aging changes reflect an earlier state of development and foreshadow future changes; hence, physical aging is inseparable from the developmental processes (Timiras, 1972).

Age Periods

Developmentalists describe specific age periods by delineating characteristics of growth and development that set these age periods apart. Researchers define the age periods somewhat differently because rarely are sharp, clear divisions discernible between the periods. Aside from events such as birth and menarche (the first menstrual cycle in girls), the age periods Mend from one to another, reflecting the continuous nature of growth, development, and maturation. In a few cases, common terms apply to more than one chronological age period, as you will see by examining the time frames listed in Table 1.1. Note also that some age periods, such as childhood, are subdivided...

Table of Contents

Part I. Introduction to Motor Development

Chapter 1. Fundamental Concepts

Defining Motor Development

Constraints: A Model for Studying Motor Development

How Do We Know It Is Change?

A Developmental Paradox: Universality Versus Variability

Summary and Synthesis

Chapter 2. Theoretical Perspectives in Motor Development

Maturational Perspective

Information Processing Perspective

Ecological Perspective

Summary and Synthesis

Chapter 3. Principles of Motion and Stability

Understanding the Principles of Motion and Stability

Using the Principles of Motion and Stability to Detect and Correct Errors

Summary and Synthesis

Part II. Physical Growth and Aging

Chapter 4. Physical Growth, Maturation, and Aging

Prenatal Development

Postnatal Development

Summary and Synthesis

Chapter 5. Development and Aging of Body Systems

Development of the Skeletal System

Development of the Muscular System

Development of the Adipose System

Development of the Endocrine System

Development of the Nervous System

Summary and Synthesis

Part III. Development of Motor Skills Across the Life Span

Chapter 6. Early Motor Development

How Do Infants Move?

Why Do Infants Move? The Purpose of Reflexes

Motor Milestones: The Pathway to Voluntary Movements

Development of Postural Control and Balance in Infancy

Summary and Synthesis

Chapter 7. Development of Human Locomotion

The First Voluntary Locomotor Efforts: Creeping and Crawling

Walking Across the Life Span

Running Across the Life Span

Other Locomotor Skills

Summary and Synthesis

Chapter 8. Development of Ballistic Skills

Overarm Throwing

Kicking

Punting

Sidearm Striking

Overarm Striking

Summary and Synthesis

Chapter 9. Development of Manipulative Skills

Grasping and Reaching

Catching

Anticipation

Summary and Synthesis

Part IV. Perceptual-Motor Development

Chapter 10. Sensory-Perceptual Development

Visual Development

Kinesthetic Development

Auditory Development

Intermodal Perception

Summary and Synthesis

Chapter 11. Perception and Action in Development

The Role of Action in Perception

Postural Control and Balance

Summary and Synthesis

Part V. Functional Constraints to Motor Development

Chapter 12. Social and Cultural Constraints in Motor Development

Social and Cultural Influences as Environmental Constraints

Society and Socialization as Environmental Constraints

Other Sociocultural Constraints: Race, Ethnicity, and Socioeconomic Status

Summary and Synthesis

Chapter 13. Psychosocial Constraints in Motor Development

Self-Esteem

Motivation

Summary and Synthesis

Chapter 14. Knowledge as a Functional Constraint in Motor Development

Knowledge Bases

Memory

Speed of Cognitive Functions

Summary and Synthesis

Part VI. Interaction of Exercise Task and Structural Constraints

Chapter 15. Development of Cardiorespiratory Endurance

Physiological Responses to Short-Term Exercise

Physiological Responses to Prolonged Exercise

Summary and Synthesis

Chapter 16. Development of Strength and Flexibility

Development of Strength

Development of Flexibility

Summary and Synthesis

Chapter 17. Development of Body Composition

Body Composition and Exercise in Children and Youth

Body Composition and Exercise in Adults

Obesity

Summary and Synthesis

Chapter 18. Conclusion: Interactions Among Constraints

Using Constraints to Enhance Learning in Physical Activity Settings

Interacting Constraints: Case Studies

Summary and Synthesis

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

“This is a welcome update and retains the quality that characterized previous editions. It contains updated peer-reviewed evidence, but, perhaps equally important, includes contributions from the well-respected authors.”

—Doody’s Book Review

Interviews

A textbook for undergraduate courses on motor development. Also a reference for researchers in motor behavior and motor development as well as practitioners in physical and occupational therapy, physical education, and rehabilitation.

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