The Effects of Three Styles of Teaching on the Psychomotor Performance And Social Skill Development of Fifth Grade Children
- 1 June 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport
- Vol. 53 (2) , 116-124
- https://doi.org/10.1080/02701367.1982.10605237
Abstract
The effects of Mosston's teaching styles B, C and E were examined in terms of motor skill acquisition and social skill development of fifth grade children. Ninety-six children, randomly selected and randomly assigned to one of three treatment groups, were taught a hockey accuracy task. Motor performance data were collected prior to, midway through, and following training; they were analyzed within groups, to determine if learning was evident, and across groups, to examine the relative effectiveness of these three styles of teaching. Social behavior patterns observed during learner-to-learner interaction were also examined during a second task in which pairs of learners were asked to “help” each other learn the task. A 3 × 3 analysis of variance with repeated measures revealed that (1) all three groups learned the task and (2) they learned comparably well. It was concluded that these three styles of teaching are all effective in facilitating learning of this type of motor task. Style C, an arrangement in whcih learners work in pairs, one performing the task while being provided with formative feedback by the other, was found not only to produce comparable learning, but to significantly enhance social skill development on those behaviors associated with giving feedback and receiving it from a peer.Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Teacher behavior and its effects.Journal of Educational Psychology, 1979
- An Experimental Study of Effective Teaching in First-Grade Reading GroupsThe Elementary School Journal, 1979
- Generalizability of Measures of Teaching BehaviorReview of Educational Research, 1976
- What Is The Basic Teaching Skill?Journal of Teacher Education, 1973