Network Magazine summer 2014 | Page 42

CEC ARTICLE TRAINING KIDS FOR SPORTING DEVELOPMENT By incorporating fundamental motor skills into children’s training and daily activity, you can increase their sports proficiency. WORDS: KELLY SUMICH hildren do not automatically become proficient at sports. Some will be naturally more adept than others, but they all need to be taught fundamental motor skills and given the opportunity to progress through stages. C Fundamental motor skill development Motor skills are voluntary, learnt movements made by the human body to achieve a task, such as a child twisting their body and moving their arm to throw a ball. Sadly, a recent study by the University of Sydney found that children’s motor skill development is on the decline. Only 10 per cent of children in the research were able to master the four expected gross motor skills of a basic sprint, a vertical jump, a side gallop and a leap by Year 2. These fundamental motor skills are important to ensure children have the basic skills needed to participate in sport. The researcher, Dr Louise Hardy, was quoted as saying that ‘parents mistakenly believe that children naturally learn these fundamental movement skills. But children need to be taught them’. So as a personal trainer, coach or parent, what are the fundamental motor skills you should focus on developing in the children you train or care for? Aim to incorporate skills such as running, side-stepping, jumping, catching, throwing and hitting a ball into children’s exercise development programs. Jumping, throwing and catching start to become more refined around the ages of nine or 10, and hitting at a later age – around 14. Create simple games that incorporate these motor skills, such as tying a ribbon around a higher item and seeing if the children can jump and touch it. Turning the activities into games will encourage greater enthusiasm and participation than simply getting them to run back and forth over a distance. Adjusting the difficulty of a motor skill Think about the sport of netball. If a child is placed in a game without background development in the fundamentals then they will be overwhelmed. There is so much happening: they need to run, catch, look for someone to throw the ball to, work around opponents, determine areas they can run in and areas that are off limits. Netball has a large number of ‘open motor skills’. This means that the sporting environment has many targets and objects in motion and/ or that they are in a constantly changing environment. To make an activity easier, environmental changes need to be restricted. For example, you would start with the child throwing the netball to another child, 42 | NETWORK SUMMER 2014