2012
DOI: 10.1080/17408989.2011.594428
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A case study to evaluate balance training with movement test items and through teaching observation: beyond specificity and transfer of learning

Abstract: Background: Specificity and transfer of learning have been examined in experimental studies. However, their findings may not be relevant to practitioners because of the difference between the experiment conditions and teaching situations. This case study investigates the theoretical issue of specificity vs. transfer of learning by conducting balance training with real-life (functional) tasks and evaluating the teaching outcomes through teaching observation of functional task performance and on the performance … Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(5 citation statements)
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References 19 publications
(21 reference statements)
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“…No systematic reviews of randomized controlled trials were identified. Meanwhile at the full-text review stage ( n = 72), in which 64 articles 4 , 10 12 , 22 81 were rejected for not meeting our inclusion criteria, Cognitive Orientation to Occupational Performance (16 studies) and Neuromotor Task Training (four studies) were the most widely represented ‘task-orientated’ type interventions investigated.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…No systematic reviews of randomized controlled trials were identified. Meanwhile at the full-text review stage ( n = 72), in which 64 articles 4 , 10 12 , 22 81 were rejected for not meeting our inclusion criteria, Cognitive Orientation to Occupational Performance (16 studies) and Neuromotor Task Training (four studies) were the most widely represented ‘task-orientated’ type interventions investigated.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This principle is consistent with the tenets of physical literacy which emphasize positive movement experiences to foster life-long participation in health-related physical activity by adapting environment, equipment, rules, and assistant services [60,61]. However, the attainment of such behavioral objectives may not always reflect changes in norm-referenced test scores [41]. How would it be possible to monitor and evaluate the progress and effect of intervention without using norm-referenced tests?…”
Section: Setting An Intervention Goal To Improve Beyond the Cutoff Point Of Norm-referenced Testsmentioning
confidence: 62%
“…These performance outcome tests are regarded as motor ability tests [24,40]. The ability tests purposefully employ decontextualized, neutral movement tasks for test items, so that all test takers should perform each test item with an equal familiarity with no advantage to anyone [41]. Due to this nature of ability tests, a norm-referenced assessment is suitable to identify where an individual is placed in the population standard.…”
Section: What Norm-referenced Tests Are Suitable and Unsuitable Formentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Observational methodology is an appropriate method for studying PE (Kluwe, Miyahara, & Heveldt, 2012;Lhuisset & Margnes, 2015) from the motor (Anguera et al, 2017) and communication (Anguera & Izquierdo, 2006) perspectives because it offers flexibility and accuracy. The observational design (Anguera et.…”
Section: Methods Designmentioning
confidence: 99%