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Gober, Billy; And Others – 1969
This program was designed to develop skills of movement which not only contribute to successful participation in games and sports but which are necessary in everyday life as well. The sequence of activities was planned: (1) to involve the child in a particular segment of movement; (2) to identify types of movement; and (3) to solve problems by…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Curriculum Guides, Guides, Health Education
Burton, Elsie C. – 1977
This book is written for physical educators and classroom teachers of elementary school children. It is divided into five parts. Part one presents background information for developing a child-centered program and explores the educational potential of movement experiences. Part two introduces a six-step model designed to provide a sound…
Descriptors: Child Development, Curriculum Development, Elementary Education, Human Body
Michigan State Board of Education, Lansing. – 1984
This document is designed to assist physical education teachers in addressing deficiencies found in Michigan students when they were tested on physical education performance objectives. The objectives included are: (1) locomotion--run, hop, skip; (2) body projection--horizontal and vertical jump; (3) rhythm--move to an even beat; (4) object…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Elementary Secondary Education, Human Body, Instructional Improvement
Goldberger, Michael – 1980
A taxonomy of psychomotor skills provides a classification of all human movement forms. The development of motor skills in this hierarchy begins with the reflexive physical responses of the infant. The stages of growth include basic interactive movement forms, skilled movement forms, and functional and creative movement forms. This taxonomy offers…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Developmental Stages, Educational Objectives, Elementary Secondary Education
American Institutes for Research in the Behavioral Sciences, Palo Alto, CA. – 1970
Three studies were conducted to develop and evaluate a diagnostically based curriculum for disadvantaged preschool children. The population consisted of 139 white and 4 Negro Appalachian 5-year-olds from the lowest socioeconomic class, who scored from 50 to 85 on the 1960 Stanford-Binet L-M Intelligence Scale. One of the 3 groups organized…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Cognitive Development, Compensatory Education, Concept Formation