Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Types and methods
of practice and
transfer of skills
- Whole
Practice
- The skill is practised from the
start point to the end point with
no breaks in the movement
- Long Jump
- Simple skill
- Closed Skill
- Self Paced Skill
- Gross skill
- Fine Skill
- Discrete skill
- High organisation skill
- Low organisation skill
- Progressive-Part Practice
- Practicing each subroutine of a
skill in order, gradually combine
each subroutine, until the whole
skill movement is complete
- Swimming Stroke
- Arms then legs then
breathing
- Complex skill
- Closed Skill
- Self paced skill
- Low organisation
skill
- Part
Practice
- The subroutines are
practised individually
- Practising the subroutines
of a complex dive routine
- Each component is practised separately
- complex skills
- closed skills
- self paced skills
- serial skills
- low
organisation
skills
- Varied Practice
- The environment is
manipulated to allow a skill to
be practised in numerous
competitive situations
- Shooting off left/right foot in
football in response to a
changing environment
- e.g. a defender
going left or right
- open skills
- complex skill
- externally paced skills
- gross skills
- fine skills
- Fixed Practice
- Repetition of practice drills
allows the athlete to complete
skills in sporting situations
- Dribbling a football
round cones
- simple skills
- complex skills
- closed skills
- self paced skills
- gross skills
- fine skills
- discrete skills
- serial skills
- low organisation skills
- high organisation skills
- Whole-Part-Whole
Practice
- The athlete practices the skill as a
whole (whole practice), then
breaks the skill into subroutines
(part practice)
- Rugby conversion
- closed skills
- self-paced skills
- low organisation skills
- Massed Practice
- Practice of a skill is
uniterrupted by breaks or
discussion, it is practiced as
a whole movement
- Long distance running
(the actual
performance)
- simple skills
- open skills
- externally paced skills
- self paced skills
- gross skills
- continuous skills
- low
organisation
skills
- Distributed Practice
- Practice of a skill has breaks
and dicussion at regular
intervals
- Long distance running
- Breaks inbetween for
tactic talks
- Simple Skill
- Open Skill
- Externally and self paced
- Gross skill
- Contnuous and low
organisation skill
- Positive
Transfer
- A previously learnt skill
aids the learning of a new
skill
- trowing a baseball and to
bowling in cricket
- Negative Transfer
- The negative effect a
previously learnt skill can
have on learning a new skill
- a shot putter
transferring to a javelin
event
- Proactive Transfer
- A previously learnt skill
affects the futher
learning of a skill
- Tennis movements being
used in a squash match
- Bilateral
Transfer
- The transfer of a
skill from one side
of the body to
another
- Learning to kick a ball
with the left foot as well
as the right foot
- Retroactive Transfer
- The effect a newly learnt skill
has on a previously learnt
skill
- The technique used in cricket
batting (new skill) affects the
skill of baseball batting (old
skill)