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Strategies | 5 |
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Barnett, Beth E. | 1 |
Bate, Elizabeth Cozzalio | 1 |
Conkell, Carol S. | 1 |
Merriman, William J. | 1 |
Napper-Owen, Gloria | 1 |
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Rauschenbach, James | 1 |
Worrell, Vicki | 1 |
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Rauschenbach, James – Strategies, 1994
Presents activities that physical educators can use to help young students who are still learning basic ball control skills. Students use a pinky ball (a small, low-bounce rubber ball) to stay on task while improving ball control skills. Games include seven-up, errors, box ball, and hit the coin. (SM)
Descriptors: Class Activities, Elementary Education, Games, Motor Development

Barnett, Beth E.; Merriman, William J. – Strategies, 1991
Confusion exists concerning basic concepts of motor development, understood as the life-long process of change in an individual's movement behaviors. The article presents 10 common misconceptions; each is followed by a clarification of the concept and a practical example. (SM)
Descriptors: Child Development, Elementary Secondary Education, Motor Development, Movement Education

Worrell, Vicki; Napper-Owen, Gloria – Strategies, 1995
Physical education teachers must ensure that students make the connection between skill development and the use of those skills to enhance their personal physical fitness. The article explains how to incorporate fitness concepts and movement activities throughout the lesson plan to develop students' fundamental skills. (SM)
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Elementary Secondary Education, Motor Development, Physical Education

Bate, Elizabeth Cozzalio – Strategies, 1996
Elementary students want to play traditional games like kickball. Teachers want them to learn developmentally appropriate skills. To meet everyone's needs, physical educators should build games progressively using the "Children Moving" approach, which satisfies all principles of developmental physical education using invariant, dynamic,…
Descriptors: Athletics, Child Development, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students

Conkell, Carol S.; Pearson, Huey – Strategies, 1995
Developmentally appropriate games in physical education provide ample learning time for all students, not just highly skilled students. The paper explains how to modify activities to be developmentally appropriate so students at all skill levels can succeed. (SM)
Descriptors: Athletics, Child Development, Developmental Stages, Developmentally Appropriate Practices