Monday, June 8, 2015

CH 9: Developing the Content

Developing the content refers to the process of helping children learn the various motors skills that are typically taught in physical education.  As part of this process, teachers decide how long students should practice a given task, which cues are most appropriate for refining the task, and how to challenge the students to improve.  Imagine you are five minutes into a lesson on dribbling a basketball.  You have tasked the students to dribble in a clockwise path around the gym.  You already have to start making decisions about when and how to change the task, provide a cue or offer a challenge.  In a typical class some students would be performing below the expected standard of being able to dribble without losing control while others are speeding around the gym dribbling easily with either hand, in and out of traffic.  What goes into your decision to change the task, provide cues to refine performance, or offer challenges to those who need them before they get bored? 
The beginning teacher might arbitrarily assign a new task every five minutes under the assumption that five minutes is about the limit before boredom sets in.  The experienced teacher, on the other hand, considers the goals of the lesson and that there is always a progression between tasks in order to arrive at proficiency.  How to design this progression is the teacher’s key challenge.  Merely changing from one dribbling activity to a different one is not necessarily a progression.  Progression in lesson design can consist of making tasks easier or harder, of changing them from static to dynamic, altering the number of required movements, changing the number of children involved (size of the group), modifying the equipment, or using defenders. 
In addition to the progression of tasks, refining through the use of teaching cues is another important aspect of practice.  Cues are a lot like feedback.  It’s all about the quality.  Saying “Keep practicing – you’ve almost got it,” to a student who is trying to dribble without “spanking” the basketball is fairly useless from an instructional standpoint.  Whereas, “Touch the ball with your fingertips – it should feel springy,” is a cue that is more likely to help the student progress.  Some cues are used too often or too indiscriminately, like “Keep your eye on the ball.”  Graham makes an interesting point that a parent who has minimal background in physical education often uses this cue for many skills: batting, catching, kicking, punting, tennis, etc., and it is occasionally the right cue for the situation. “But the skillful physical educator, in contrast to the uninformed parent, is able to provide the child with an appropriate cue that enables the child to concentrate on an aspect of the movement that will lead to an efficient motor pattern for that skill.”  This is where the art of teaching is evident.  That ability to isolate a small piece of the skill that the student can give their complete focus to is the key to unlocking the larger skill.  What is the right cue for the child who does not step with the opposite leg when throwing but rather with the same side leg? “Step with the other leg,” “You’re a righty, so step with the left leg,” “Keep your right foot back and step and throw with your left leg.”  All are bound to be ineffective.  The key is for the child to get the feeling of shifting all his weight to the back (right) leg to the point where they are standing on one leg only.  That is the essential piece – the tipping point at which the correct motion becomes inevitable.
While two thirds of the class works on static or dynamic dribbling tasks, one third will need additional challenge to ingrain their skill and bring it to a new level.  Introducing defenders is one possibility.  But that might demand too much reorganization of the space.  A good alternative would be to introduce a piece of equipment that would increase the challenge.  You might offer the choice of tossing a scarf while dribbling, or a set of bean bags that have to be picked up and dropped in a bucket while maintaining the dribble.

How does the reflective teacher improve his or her teaching in this area?  One way is to have an observer record data about the type and frequency of teaching cues you give.  Graham provides examples of templates that allow the observer to capture information about statements that the teacher makes to the class about motor skills (not behavior).  The key is for the observer to capture the intent of the statement as being in one of the three categories:  extending/changing tasks, refining tasks, applying challenge.  The observer totals the frequency of statements in each category so that patterns become clear.  This is helpful information for a teacher, but it’s at least as important to assess the quality of the tasks, cues and challenges in terms of results in student performance.  Some key questions to ask are:  Did the students understand and use the cues being emphasized?  Was the cue appropriate – was it the right cue at the right time?  Was the progression of tasks to easy or too hard?  Were tasks changed unnecessarily or too quickly?  Did the challenges motivate students to practice longer?  Were the tasks appropriate for accomplishing your objectives for the lesson?

No comments:

Post a Comment

Please start your comment with your name and school building.