Publication | Closed Access
Teaching across the Curriculum: Language-Enriched Physical Education for Preschool Children
50
Citations
3
References
1996
Year
Physical ActivityKindergarten EducationMotor DevelopmentLanguage DevelopmentEducationPreschool DevelopmentEarly Childhood EducationMotor DifficultyElementary EducationPreschool TeachingTeacher EducationPhysical Activity InterventionPhysical EducationEarly Childhood TeachingCognitive DevelopmentLanguage AcquisitionChild LanguageHealth SciencesLanguage CurriculumRehabilitationCurriculum DevelopmentCurriculumChild DevelopmentPhysical DevelopmentEarly EducationLanguage-enriched Physical EducationPediatricsChildhood Physical ActivityChildren Age 4Special EducationMotor Skill InterventionPreschool Education
Children age 4 to 6 years from special education ( n = 26), Head Start ( n = 35), and typical preschool classes ( n = 11) were assigned to a physical activity intervention or a language-enriched physical activity intervention. Language and motor skill performances were measured before, immediately following, and 3 months following the 24-session, 8-week intervention. Results illustrated that language instruction can be added to physical education lessons without requiring additional instructional time and, more importantly, without compromising improvement in motor skill performance. Further, preschool children exposed to language-enriched physical education improved their language skills regardless of whether their educational progress was characterized by a cognitive and/or language delay. Thus, physical activity appears to be an effective environment in which to enhance the cognitive development of preschool children of all abilities.
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