粗大运动技能
运动技能
读写能力
随机对照试验
物理疗法
心理学
运动学习
干预(咨询)
整群随机对照试验
课程
物理医学与康复
发展心理学
医学
教育学
外科
神经科学
精神科
作者
Rohan M. Telford,Lisa Olive,Richard D. Telford
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.jsams.2022.04.009
摘要
The Active Early Learning intervention was designed to support childcare educators to imbed physical literacy promoting activities into the daily childcare curriculum. The objective of this study was to determine whether this physical literacy intervention had any influence on motor skill development.22-week stratified cluster randomised controlled trial.Fifteen childcare centres (8 intervention, 7 control centres; 314 children, 180 boys, 4.3y ± 0.4) participated in the study. Six motor skills were assessed: object control (ball drop/catch and bean bag throw accuracy), locomotor control (10 m shuttle run), stability (one-leg balance and tiptoe walking on a line), and fine motor control (coin manipulation). Intervention effects were evaluated using linear mixed models adjusted for age, sex, socio-economic status, and centre clustering.There was evidence for an intervention effect on fine motor control (-0.47 s, CI [-0.93 to -0.02], p = .041) and the ball drop/catch task (0.68, CI [0.01-1.35], p = .046), but not for locomotor control, stability, or throw accuracy.Improvements in children's gross and fine motor skills can be achieved with a physical literacy intervention delivered by childcare educators. However, broad enhancement of motor skills cannot be assumed by simply introducing more physical literacy promoting activities into the daily routine, and specific motor skill instruction seems warranted in childcare settings.
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