Cross-cultural comparison of motor competence in children from Australia and Belgium

Motor competence in childhood is an important determinant of physical activity and physical fitness in later life. However, childhood competence levels in many countries are lower than desired. Due to the many different motor skill instruments in use, children's motor competence across countries is rarely compared. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the motor competence of children from Australia and Belgium using the Korperkoordinationstest fur Kinder (KTK). The sample consisted of 244 (43.4% boys) Belgian children and 252 (50.0% boys) Australian children, aged 6-8 years. A MANCOVA for... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Bardid, Farid
Rudd, James
Lenoir, Matthieu
Polman, Remco
Barnett, Lisa
Dokumenttyp: Contribution to Journal
Erscheinungsdatum: 2015
Verlag/Hrsg.: Frontiers Media SA
Schlagwörter: Australia / Belgium / KTK / Psychology / assessment battery / body-mass index / childhood / children / comparison / cross-cultural / fitness / fundamental movement skills / fur kinder / health / motor assessment / motor competence / physical-activity / preschool-children / validity
Sprache: unknown
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-26978065
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://eprints.qut.edu.au/106376/

Motor competence in childhood is an important determinant of physical activity and physical fitness in later life. However, childhood competence levels in many countries are lower than desired. Due to the many different motor skill instruments in use, children's motor competence across countries is rarely compared. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the motor competence of children from Australia and Belgium using the Korperkoordinationstest fur Kinder (KTK). The sample consisted of 244 (43.4% boys) Belgian children and 252 (50.0% boys) Australian children, aged 6-8 years. A MANCOVA for the motor scores showed a significant country effect. Belgian children scored higher on jumping sideways, moving sideways and hopping for height but not for balancing backwards. Moreover, a Chi squared test revealed significant differences between the Belgian and Australian score distribution with 21.3% Belgian and 39.3% Australian children scoring "below average." The very low levels reported by Australian children may be the result of cultural differences in physical activity contexts such as physical education and active transport. When compared to normed scores, both samples scored significantly worse than children 40 years ago. The decline in children's motor competence is a global issue, largely influenced by increasing sedentary behavior and a decline in physical activity.