Monday, December 5, 2011

The effect of competence in fundamental motor skills on physical activity


The relationship between motor skill competence, or proficiency in fundamental motor skills (FMS), and physical activity strengthens as a child progress throughout development. FMS includes walking and running, and can be thought of as the basis for future movements (Stodden et al., 2008). Without proficiency in FMS, physical activity declines, decreasing factors such as perceived motor skill competence, or the child’s perception of their motor skill, and physical fitness, possibly leading to obesity.

               Young children display a weak relation between physical activity and proficiency in FMS due to their differences in experience, such as from parental influences and the variable climate. For example, some children are very active because their parents encourage them to try new physical activities, whereas some children are inactive due to the terrible climate in which they live.  At this stage, the increase in physical activity improves the communication between the brain and the muscles, which can in turn promote coordination, therefore competence in FMS (Stodden et al., 2008).

               As a child moves into middle and late adulthood, an inverse relationship is seen, where a strengthened motor skill competence drives physical activity levels. Some of the individual and environmental constraints that hindered the amount of physical activity in childhood, such as the lack of coordination, decrease due to proficiency in FMS. This allows an individual to participate in various physical activities, thereby increasing motor repetition.

               Additionally, a child’s perception of their motor skill competence also affects the relationship between physical activity and motor skill competence. In early childhood, a child may perceive themselves as very proficient in motor skills, but have inadequate skills in reality. But because the child believes themselves to be highly skilled, he or she will be persistent in mastering various activities, thereby increasing FMS and physical activity due to repetition.

               As a child transitions from early to middle childhood, they begin to correlate perceived motor skill competence with actual motor skill competence (Stodden et al., 2008). In other words, those individuals with lower motor competence will tend to disengage in physical activity because they realize their lack of motor skill competence, promoting a negative spiral of physical inactivity that may lead to obesity.

               Overweight children have a greater difficulty performing physical activities due to their increased overall size. Because overweight children will not engage in physical activities compared to a healthy weight, fit individual, motor skill competence is lowered due to less repetition (Stodden et al., 2008). But with higher motor skill competence, an increase in physical activity and fitness, along with higher perception of motor skill competence can be achieved, leading to a healthy weight.

               Furthermore, adequate motor skill competence promotes physical activity, which can in turn increase physical fitness. Children that are more fit during childhood and adolescence will continue to be physically active in the future, strengthening the relationship between motor skill competence and physical activity. With limited fitness levels, it will hinder the child from participating in physical activities that require adequate fitness levels, which is the case with most sports, further declining motor competence development.

               In the long run, Stodden et al. (2008) hopes that their model will stimulate research and stress the multifaceted problems that leads to inadequate motor competency, such as obesity, negatively perceived motor competence, and lack of physical fitness, which hinders engagement in physical activity.


References


  •           Stodden, D. F., Goodway, J. D., Langendorfer, S. J., Roberton, M. A., Rudisill, M. E.,                                     Garcia, C., Garcia, L. E. (2008). A developmental perspective on the role of motor skill competence in physical activity: an emergent relationship. Quest, 60, 290-306.

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