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Kids
and Sports: Fundamentals First
By Rae Pica
Would you hand a child calculus problems once she was able to count
to ten? A geometry text when he began to recognize shapes? War and
Peace as soon as she could recite her ABCs? Of course not! Not only
is it preposterous to have such expectations of a child, but also
it sets up the child for failure — and, most likely, a dread of
and distaste for calculus, geometry, and reading.
Yet
all too many children are enrolled in gymnastics, karate, dance
classes, and organized sports before they’ve mastered such basic
movements as bending and stretching, walking with correct posture,
and bouncing and catching a ball. How is that significantly different
from expecting a child who’s barely learned to speak to recite the
Declaration of Independence — for an audience, no less?
The
fact that a little one can walk doesn’t necessarily mean he’s ready
to successfully — or fearlessly — walk a balance beam. Because a
toddler is flexible enough to get her big toe into her mouth, that
doesn’t mean she’s ready for ballet’s pliés and relevés. Even if
a five-year-old can run circles around you, it doesn’t mean he’s
prepared to simultaneously run and dribble a ball in a fast-paced
game of soccer. And how much sense does it make to enroll an eight-year-old
in competitive softball while she’s still demonstrating an improper
throwing form?
The
basic motor skills — nonlocomotor (stationary, like bending and
stretching), locomotor (traveling, like walking or hopping), and
manipulative (object control, like bouncing and catching a ball)
— have been called the ABCs of movement. And, just as we wouldn’t
expect children to begin reading without the ability to identify
letters of the alphabet, we shouldn’t expect children to take part
in certain structured physical activities without first experiencing
success with the ABCs of movement.
Movements
— from the simple to the complex — are like building blocks. You
must have the foundation laid before you can construct the ground
floor. You’ve got to have the ground floor completed before the
rest of the building can be erected. Similarly, a logical progression
of motor skills is essential if children are to achieve optimal
motor development. If they skip the prerequisites, they may never
progress successfully from one level of skill development to the
next.
Moreover,
bad habits acquired early in life are likely to persist throughout
an entire lifetime. For example, the young pitcher who hasn’t yet
acquired a mature level of throwing isn’t likely to lose his bad
habits simply because he’s required to pitch one or two games a
week. Rather, the odds are these bad habits will simply become more
and more ingrained as time goes on — a situation that could have
ripple-effect consequences for years to come. He could, for instance,
develop shoulder problems that prevent him not only from pitching
in high school and beyond but also from taking part in recreational
and fitness activities as an adult.
In
the course of a lifetime, it is from the prenatal period through
age five that children acquire and best learn the basic motor skills.
The most sensible course of action, therefore, is to ensure children
learn them correctly during this period. The least sensible strategy
is for children to learn incorrectly or only to a certain, low level
and expect them to correct their errors or improve their skill level
merely because they age chronologically. Writing
in the International Journal of Physical Education, motor development
specialist and professor Carl Gabbard states: “In contemporary motor
development literature, the period of early childhood is associated
with the fundamental movement phase of motor behavior. This is a
unique period in the lifespan due primarily to the emergence of
fundamental movement abilities which establish the foundation upon
which more complex movement skills are possible later in life.”
In
other words, fundamentals first. Children should walk before they
run. They should bend and stretch before they twist and dodge. They
should throw for distance before throwing for accuracy. Static movement
(balancing on tiptoes or hitting a ball off a tee) should precede
dynamic movement (walking a balance beam or hitting a pitched ball).
And children should definitely succeed at single actions (like bouncing
a ball) before attempting combinations of them (simultaneously running
and bouncing a ball).
Still,
a study conducted at Northern Kentucky University found that almost
half (49%) of children ages five to eight lacked the minimum skills
necessary to play organized sports. And yet there are millions of
five-to-eight-year-old — not to mention three– and four-year-old
— children who are playing (or trying to play) organized sports.
There are millions of others participating in dance, gymnastics,
karate, and more who similarly lack the requisite skills. Of course,
if a child is involved in sports, dance, gymnastics, and such, there’s
even more reason to ensure she’s able to successfully perform the
fundamentals. First, fundamentals are the prerequisites to sport-specific,
dance, and gymnastic skills. If a child can’t perform a skill required
by her chosen activity, the chances are excellent she hasn’t sufficiently
learned a prerequisite skill. Second — and perhaps more important
— children who are successful in physical activities continue in
those physical activities and others.
Rae
Pica is a children’s movement specialist and the author of Your
Active Child: How to Boost Physical, Emotional, and Cognitive
Development through Age-Appropriate Activity (McGraw-Hill, 2003).
You can visit Rae at www.movingandlearning.com.
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