PERCEPTUAL MOTOR SKILLS
![]() |
Perceptual motor skills |
Perceptual
motor skills refer to a child’s developing ability to interact with his
environment by combining the use of the senses and motor skills. This is viewed
as a process where visual, auditory, and tactile sensory abilities are combined
with emerging motor skills to develop perceptual motor skills. Perception
refers to the process of taking in, organizing, and interpreting sensory
information, while motor skills refers to the ability to control the body’s
movements including the movement of the eyes. Gross motor skills include the
movement of large limbs or the whole body as in walking. Fine motor skills are
developed with the use of the fingers to grasp and manipulate objects.
There
is a mutual dependency between perceptual information and voluntary motor
activity. Perceptual abilities are learned and rely upon movement as the way to
obtain this learning. Conversely, movement involves a perceptual awareness of
sensory stimulation to develop satisfactorily. When functioning normally, this
reciprocal interaction is generally done naturally and informally as children
explore and play. However, formal training in physical education programs and
special remedial therapies are also helpful in developing perceptual motor
skills.
These
perceptual motor skills include body awareness, spatial awareness, directional
awareness, and temporal awareness. Body awareness involves being able to locate
body parts and understand the function of them. Spatial awareness is being
aware of the space occupied by the body and how to position and maneuver in it.
Differentiating between left and right, front and back, top or bottom, and up
and down involve directional awareness. Temporal awareness is the ability to
understand the concept of time passing, the sequence of events, and the
prediction of how soon moving objects arrive.
Activities in perceptual motor skills include:
* Gross
motor activities: throwing, catching, kicking, jumping, swinging
* Fine
motor activities: cutting, lacing, hammering, buttoning, pouring
*Body
awareness activities: naming, pointing, identifying, moving, and performing
tasks using body parts
*Spatial
awareness activities: moving, exploring, locating, comparing, and identifying
using walking, running, catching, rolling, tunnels, mazes
*
Directional awareness activities: moving, stationing, pointing, identifying,
and imitating using the body, objects, and apparatus
*
Balance activities: walking, bounding, and clapping using balance beams and
boards, trampolines, and spring boards
*Integration
activities: hitting moving balls, tracking moving objects, matching visual and
motor responses, and responding to auditory signals
* Expressive
activities: art, music, dance and dramatic play
Comments
Post a Comment