Assessment of primary school students’ decision-making related to tactical contexts

The purpose of this study was to assess and understand prior tactical knowledge and game performance as well as the relationship between the different components of game performance in invasion games. The participants (N = 22; girls: 13; boys: 9) were Physical Education students (ages: 11–12) with a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of new approaches in educational research 2012-07, Vol.1 (1), p.7-12
Hauptverfasser: Gutiérrez, David, García-López, Luis Miguel
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The purpose of this study was to assess and understand prior tactical knowledge and game performance as well as the relationship between the different components of game performance in invasion games. The participants (N = 22; girls: 13; boys: 9) were Physical Education students (ages: 11–12) with a low expertise in invasion games (they were selected among those with no other background in invasion games than PE lessons). Their game performance was videotaped, after which measures of motor execution and cognitive components were developed from observational analysis. Decision- making was measured on two levels: a) decision-making restricted to the performance of technical-tactical skills; and b) decision-making focused on adapting to the offensive tactical contexts of the game. Participants played an eight-minute-long 4-versus-4 generic invasion game. The latter was designed to meet both developmental needs and previous learning, so interference between motor execution ability and decision-making performance was minimized. The findings revealed that these students already had a basic concept of offensive and defensive game situations, both on-the-ball and off-the-ball. No significant differences were found between players’ performance in penetrating-the-defense contexts and in those where they kept ball possession. The findings additionally highlighted the existence of significant relationships between decision-making and skill execution in getting open, tackling, marking off-ball and double teaming. Other links between game performance components are discussed throughout the paper. The importance of assessing game performance taking into account tactical contexts is also supported (Gutiérrez, González, García-López, & Mitchell, 2011), as well as some of the GCA pedagogical principles, e.g. the use of modified games (Oslin & Mitchell, 2006). Resumen El objeto de este estudio era evaluar y entender el conocimiento táctico previo y rendimiento en el juego, así como la relación entre los distintos componentes del rendimiento en el juego, en los juegos de invasión. Los participantes (N = 22; chicas: 13; chicos: 9) eran alumnos de Educación Física (edades: 11–12) con bajos conocimientos sobre juegos de invasión (se seleccionaron entre aquellos que no poseían más experiencia en juegos de invasión que la adquirida en clase de Educación Física). Se grabó en video el rendimiento en el juego, y a partir del análisis observacional se desarrollaron medidas de ejecució
ISSN:2254-7339
2254-7339
DOI:10.7821/naer.1.1.7-12