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Individual Differences in Movement Development

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Head or spinal cord injury. 6. Motor Challenges, continued. SKELETAL. Amputation or absent limbs ... considered first, not the challenge they face in movement ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Individual Differences in Movement Development


1
Lecture 6
  • Individual Differences in Movement Development

2
Review Week 5
  • Normative development in manipulative movements
  • Sources of individual variation
  • Fine motor movements ( e.g. grasp-release),
    movements against resistance ( e.g. lift), and
    receipt-propulsion(e.g. catch-throw)

3
Objectives Week 6
  • Awareness of the implications of major motor and
    sensory challenges for movement
  • Awareness of minor variations in development, and
    their effect on apparent development or ability
  • Introduction to adaptions to movement programs
    catering for diverse development

4
Major Areas of Variation
  • MOTOR
  • Central nervous system challenges (e.g.cerebral
    palsy, spina bifida)
  • Skeletal challenges (e.g. absent
    limbs,osteogenesis imperfecta)
  • SENSORY
  • Low visual acuity, lazy eye,blindness
  • Hearing impairment
  • Extreme sensitivity or low sensitivity to
    tactile, kinesthetic etc sensory information

5
Motor Challenges
  • CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM
  • Cerebral palsy e.g. spasticity,athetosis
  • Muscular dystrophy
  • Spina bifida
  • Head or spinal cord injury

6
Motor Challenges, continued
  • SKELETAL
  • Amputation or absent limbs
  • Osteogenesis imperfecta
  • Correctable orthopedic impairments

7
Minor Gross Motor Variations
  • Delayed or accelerated development
  • Low motor tone and reduced strength
  • Differences between body sides
  • Chronic health conditions
  • Motor control e.g. posture,coordination
  • Motor planning challenges

8
Minor Fine Motor Variations
  • Theories about retained reflexes
  • Immature development
  • Accelerated development
  • Low motor tone , extreme fatigue, motor planning,
    motor control
  • Intention tremor
  • Facial motor control

9
Experience 1 Try out and Discuss
  • Experience for yourself the challenge of picking
    up objects if your hands have tremor or are
    flexed move jerkily
  • Consider adaptions which could be made to
    materials to assist you in using them
  • Discuss assistance others could give you to
    ensure you feel successful

10
Experience 1 Feedback
  • How did you feel trying out movements with these
    challenges? How do you think this would influence
    you each day?
  • Did you think some ideas for younger children
    would be suitable, or not?
  • What changes and assistance appeared practical
    and would not offend the person?

11
Sensory Challenges
  • Visual acuity, lazy eye, squint, tunnel vision,
    nystagmus, photophobia
  • Sensory-neural and conductive hearing loss,
    intermittent.
  • Sensitivity variations

12
Minor Sensory Variations
  • Unsteady balance and earthbound
  • Wide variability within individual child
  • Tactile defensiveness
  • Midline stopping
  • Form reversals
  • Eye hand coordination variations

13
Experience 2 Try Out and Discuss
  • Close your eyes until you can see just a little,
    then try to draw or write. Note the influence on
    your skill and feelings.
  • Start a drawing using one hand, but draw only on
    that side of the page. Then swap hands, and draw
    on the other side of the page. Stop at the
    midline each time.

14
Experience 2 Feedback
  • How did you find the reduced visual acuity
    influenced you? What was the feeling?
  • What was the effect of midline stopping on the
    flow of your drawing?
  • What did you think may have helped you in feeling
    more successful?

15
Adaptions to Support Children
  • PRACTICAL
  • Environment changes e.g.space,equipment
  • Communication /other specialised equipment
  • Assistive technologies
  • Computer adaptions
  • ADULT SUPPORT
  • Handling/positioning
  • Observation to note when child needs you
  • Suit plan to childs actual development
  • Subtle assistance

16
Dealing with the Feeling
  • A child is a child, not a disability
  • Sensitive support
  • Child frustration
  • Other childrens responses
  • Adult embarrassment

17
Remember Usual Sources of Individual Variation
  • Child health and emotional wellbeing
  • Individual child disposition, special interest
  • Experience child has at offered at home
  • Cultural attitudes of families
  • Availability of services and facilities for range
    of experiences in community

18
Planning for the Individual Child
  • Observe the individual childs development in
    each movement area. There might be considerable
    variation within the individual
  • Reflect on sources of individual variation you
    may need to take into account
  • Plan for the next step taking the childs own
    circumstances into account

19
Key Attitudes of Early Childhood Educators
  • The child is not being fixed up i.e. you are
    NOT remediating deficits, you are working from
    their current competency
  • The child is NOT defined by their challenge i.e.
    the individual is considered first, not the
    challenge they face in movement
  • All children present variations

20
Overall Teaching Approach
  • Normative sequences ( travel maps) provide a
    frame for assessing current competency and
    planning for childs next step (zpd)
  • Modifications to usual experiences and materials
    can be made by trying them as the child does, or
    observing childs actual use
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