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Applying the Principles of Motor Learning in Preventative Programs of Overuse Injuries in Young Athletes: A Scoping Review

Mohsen Shafizadeh, Shahab Parvinpour, and Andrew Barnes

This study aimed to review the scope of overuse injury prevention programs in young players through the lens of application of motor learning principles. From 280 studies found in the initial search, 13 studies were selected based on a series of inclusion criteria. The selected studies were categorized based on the type of intervention resulting in multicomponent (two studies), Fédération Internationale de Football Association 11+ (five studies), neuromuscular training (two studies), Fédération Internationale de Football Association Medical Assessment and Research Center (two studies), educational (one study), and stability (one study). The studies that had an effective preventative role to reduce overuse injuries applied some principles of motor learning to their intervention, such as contextual interference, variability of practice, task constraints, the power law of practice, transfer of learning, and explicit methods. There is a gap in the literature related to explicit applications of motor learning principles in the design of preventative interventions for overuse injury.

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Sex-Related Differences in the Association of Fundamental Movement Skills and Health and Behavioral Outcomes in Children

Phillip J. Hill, Melitta A. McNarry, Leanne Lester, Lawrence Foweather, Lynne M. Boddy, Stuart J. Fairclough, and Kelly A. Mackintosh

This study aimed to assess whether sex moderates the association of fundamental movement skills and health and behavioral outcomes. In 170 children (10.6 ±0.3 years; 98 girls), path analysis was used to assess the associations of fundamental movement skills (Get Skilled, Get Active) with perceived sports competence (Children and Youth—Physical Self-Perception Profile), time spent in vigorous-intensity physical activity, sedentary time, and body mass index z score. For boys, object control skill competence had a direct association with perceived sports competence (β = 0.39; 95% confidence interval, CI [0.21, 0.57]) and an indirect association with sedentary time, through perceived sports competence (β = −0.19; 95% CI [−0.09, −0.32]). No significant association was observed between fundamental movement skills and perceived sports competence for girls, although locomotor skills were found to predict vigorous-intensity physical activity (β = 0.18; 95% CI [0.08, 0.27]). Perceived sports competence was associated with sedentary time, with this being stronger for boys (β = −0.48; 95% CI [−0.64, −0.31]) than girls (β = −0.29; 95% CI [−0.39, −0.19]). The study supports a holistic approach to health-related interventions and highlights a key association of perceived sports competence and the time children spend sedentary.

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SKIPping With PAX: Evaluating the Effects of a Dual-Component Intervention on Gross Motor Skill and Social–Emotional Development

Ali Brian, Emily E. Munn, T. Cade Abrams, Layne Case, Sally Taunton Miedema, Alexandra Stribing, Unjong Lee, and Stephen Griffin

childhood ( Barnett et al., 2016 ; Haapala, 2013 ; McClelland & Cameron, 2019 ; Robson et al., 2020 ). Intervening during early childhood may impact the overall trajectory of a child’s health and well-being. Unfortunately, intervening during early childhood is becoming more of a requisite than an option

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#DCD/Dyspraxia in Real Life: Twitter Users’ Unprompted Expression of Experiences With Motor Differences

Priscila M. Tamplain, Nicholas E. Fears, Promise Robinson, Riya Chatterjee, Gavin Lichtenberg, and Haylie L. Miller

any single geographic location. DCD/dyspraxic Twitter users can provide valuable insight into the lifespan impact of their motor characteristics on functional ability, participation, compensatory strategies, and well-being. Most importantly, their lived experiences can and should inform diagnostic and

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Motor Competence Among Children in the United Kingdom and Ireland: An Expert Statement on Behalf of the International Motor Development Research Consortium

Michael J. Duncan, Lawrence Foweather, Farid Bardid, Anna L. Barnett, James Rudd, Wesley O’Brien, Jonathan D. Foulkes, Clare Roscoe, Johann Issartel, Gareth Stratton, and Cain C.T. Clark

, community sports, and healthcare systems do not focus on enhancing MC in children and adolescents, the potential long-term impacts of low MC, including higher rates of inactivity and poorer health and well-being, will likely create a significant social, health, and economic burden for the United Kingdom and

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Motor Skill Development and Youth Physical Activity: A Social Psychological Perspective

Maureen R. Weiss

, self-determination theory ( Deci & Ryan, 1985 ) is a framework for understanding variations in motivation, health, and well-being. The theory posits that individuals have three basic psychological needs—the need for competence (to feel capable in an activity), the need for autonomy (to experience

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The Move2Smile Online Hub for Parents to Support Aspects of Preschoolers’ Physical Literacy at Home: A Feasibility Study

Maeghan E. James, John Cairney, Nikoleta Odorico, Tracia Finlay-Watson, and Kelly P. Arbour-Nicitopoulos

Physical activity (PA) is essential for supporting young children’s development and well-being ( Lee et al., 2020 ; Timmons et al., 2012 ). Most children (70%) aged less than five are meeting the Canadian Physical Activity Guidelines ( Barnes et al., 2016 ); however, after the age of five

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Construct Validity and Reliability of the Affordances for Motor Behavior of Schoolchildren in South India

Vinuta Deshpande, Pratiksha Kalgutkar, Ana Filipa Silva, and Fábio Saraiva Flôres

& Kambas, 2010 ). The well-being, competence, and adaptive functioning of children are all correlated with the quality of the home environment ( Bradley & Putnick, 2012 ). For instance, children who have better access to learning resources at home from late infancy through adolescence and have enriching

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International Society of Research and Advocacy for Developmental Coordination Disorder (ISRA-DCD)—15th Biannual Conference and International Motor Development Research Consortium (I-MDRC)—6th Assembly

understand the integrative and cascading impact that “learning to move” and “moving to learn” have on physical, psychological, social, emotional, and cognitive development. All of these factors play a role for long-term health, well-being and achievement, yet our work is only beginning to scratch the surface

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Does Sedentary Behavior Predict Motor Competence in Young Children?

Daniel das Virgens Chagas, Kylie Hesketh, Katherine Downing, Mohammadreza Mohebbi, and Lisa M. Barnett

physical fitness ( Fitzpatrick et al., 2012 ), and poorer psychological well-being ( Hinkley et al., 2014 ). Furthermore, sedentary behavior may impact aspects of development in young people, such as motor competence. Motor competence is a global term describing goal-directed human movement ( Robinson et