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Considerations related to the definition, measurement and analysis of perceived motor competence

journal contribution
posted on 2018-12-01, 00:00 authored by Isaac Estevan, Lisa BarnettLisa Barnett
The promotion of motor competence is integral to a holistic view of children's development. Motor development models address the potential role of actual and perceived motor competence, physical activity and health-related fitness in children's health. Actual motor competence and optimal levels of perceived motor competence seem to be key for engaging children and adolescents in physical activity and sports. Commonly, the assessment of perceived motor competence is carried out by using instruments originally developed to assess different constructs of physical self-perception with the consequent error assumed. The aim of this article is to therefore offer clarification regarding the concept of perceived motor competence in terms of the conceptual and theoretical framework used for its explanation. A hierarchical and multidimensional structure of global self-concept is proposed with perceived motor competence considered as a subdomain of perceived sport/athletic competence (depending on the age or stage of development of the child) and subdivided into different subdomains of perceived competence in stability, locomotion, object control and active play skills. In order to improve consistency in the approach to assessment, it is desirable that researchers report an agreed definition for the construct of perceived motor competence so that readers can recognise the assumptions within the study accurately. Furthermore, it is suggested that instruments characterised by an alignment between actual and perceived motor competence assessments will help us understand more about children's motor perceptions.

History

Journal

Sports medicine

Volume

48

Issue

12

Pagination

2685 - 2694

Publisher

Springer

Location

Cham, Switzerland

eISSN

1179-2035

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2018, Springer International Publishing AG, part of Springer Nature