Everyone Can Implement Eduball in Physical Education to Develop Cognitive and Motor Skills in Primary School Students

Studies suggest that incorporating core academic subjects into physical education (PE) stimulates the development of both motor and cognitive skills in primary school students. For example, several experiments show that children's participation in Eduball, i.e., a method that uses educational b...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of environmental research and public health 2022-01, Vol.19 (3), p.1275
Hauptverfasser: Wawrzyniak, Sara, Korbecki, Marcin, Cichy, Ireneusz, Kruszwicka, Agnieszka, Przybyla, Tomasz, Klichowski, Michal, Rokita, Andrzej
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container_title International journal of environmental research and public health
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creator Wawrzyniak, Sara
Korbecki, Marcin
Cichy, Ireneusz
Kruszwicka, Agnieszka
Przybyla, Tomasz
Klichowski, Michal
Rokita, Andrzej
description Studies suggest that incorporating core academic subjects into physical education (PE) stimulates the development of both motor and cognitive skills in primary school students. For example, several experiments show that children's participation in Eduball, i.e., a method that uses educational balls with printed letters, numbers, and other signs, improves their physical fitness while simultaneously developing their mathematical and language skills. However, the question of who should conduct such classes to make them most effective (regular classroom teachers, physical education teachers, or maybe both in cooperation?) remains unanswered. Here, we replicated a previous Eduball experiment, but now, instead of one experimental group, there were three. In the first, Eduball-classes were conducted by the classroom teacher, in the second, by the physical education teacher, and in the third, collaboratively. After one year intervention, all experimental groups significantly improved both their cognitive (mathematical, reading, and writing) and gross motor (locomotor and object control) skills, and these effects were larger than in the control group participating in traditional PE. Importantly, there were no differences in progression between the Eduball-groups. Thus, our study demonstrates that methods linking PE with cognitive tasks can be effectively used by both PE specialists and general classroom teachers.
doi_str_mv 10.3390/ijerph19031275
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subjects Age
Child
Children & youth
Classrooms
Cognition
Cognition & reasoning
Cognitive ability
Cognitive tasks
Collaboration
Congressional committees
Cooperation
Core curriculum
Education
Experiments
Games
Humans
Hypotheses
Motor ability
Motor skill
Motor Skills
Motor task performance
Native languages
Physical education
Physical Education and Training
Physical fitness
Schools
Students
Teachers
title Everyone Can Implement Eduball in Physical Education to Develop Cognitive and Motor Skills in Primary School Students
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