Haibach Pamela S, Wagner Matthias O, Lieberman Lauren J
Department of Kinesiology, Sport Studies, and Physical Education, The College at Brockport, State University of New York, United States.
University of Konstanz, 78457 Konstanz, Germany.
Res Dev Disabil. 2014 Oct;35(10):2577-84. doi: 10.1016/j.ridd.2014.05.030. Epub 2014 Jul 9.
Children with visual impairments (CWVI) generally perform poorer in gross motor skills when compared with their sighted peers. This study examined the influence of age, sex, and severity of visual impairment upon locomotor and object control skills in CWVI. Participants included 100 CWVI from across the United States who completed the Test of Gross Motor Development II (TGMD-II). The TGMD-II consists of 12 gross motor skills including 6 object control skills (catching, kicking, striking, dribbling, throwing, and rolling) and 6 locomotor skills (running, sliding, galloping, leaping, jumping, and hopping). The full range of visual impairments according to United States Association for Blind Athletes (USABA; B3=20/200-20/599, legally blind; B2=20/600 and up, travel vision; B1=totally blind) were assessed. The B1 group performed significantly worse than the B2 (0.000 ≤ p ≤ 0.049) or B3 groups (0.000 ≤ p ≤ 0.005); however, there were no significant differences between B2 and B3 except for the run (p=0.006), catch (p=0.000), and throw (p=0.012). Age and sex did not play an important role in most of the skills, with the exception of boys outperforming girls striking (p=0.009), dribbling (p=0.013), and throwing (p=0.000), and older children outperforming younger children in dribbling (p=0.002). The significant impact of the severity of visual impairment is likely due to decreased experiences and opportunities for children with more severe visual impairments. In addition, it is likely that these reduced experiences explain the lack of age-related differences in the CWVI. The large disparities in performance between children who are blind and their partially sighted peers give direction for instruction and future research. In addition, there is a critical need for intentional and specific instruction on motor skills at a younger age to enable CWVI to develop their gross motor skills.
与视力正常的同龄人相比,视力障碍儿童(CWVI)的大肌肉运动技能通常较差。本研究考察了年龄、性别和视力障碍严重程度对CWVI的移动和物体控制技能的影响。参与者包括来自美国各地的100名CWVI,他们完成了《大肌肉发展测试第二版》(TGMD-II)。TGMD-II包括12项大肌肉运动技能,其中包括6项物体控制技能(接球、踢球、击球、运球、投掷和滚动)和6项移动技能(跑步、滑行、疾驰、跳跃、单脚跳和双脚跳)。根据美国盲人运动员协会(USABA;B3=20/200 - 20/599,法定失明;B2=20/600及以上,有出行视力;B1=全盲)对所有视力障碍情况进行了评估。B1组的表现明显比B2组(0.000≤p≤0.049)或B3组(0.000≤p≤0.005)差;然而,除了跑步(p=0.006)、接球(p=0.000)和投掷(p=0.012)外,B2组和B3组之间没有显著差异。年龄和性别在大多数技能中并不起重要作用,但男孩在击球(p=0.009)、运球(p=0.013)和投掷(p=0.000)方面表现优于女孩,年龄较大的儿童在运球方面表现优于年龄较小的儿童(p=0.002)。视力障碍严重程度的显著影响可能是由于视力障碍较严重的儿童的经历和机会减少。此外,这些减少的经历可能解释了CWVI中缺乏与年龄相关的差异。失明儿童与其部分视力正常的同龄人在表现上的巨大差异为教学和未来研究指明了方向。此外,迫切需要在儿童较小时期针对运动技能进行有针对性的具体指导,以使CWVI能够发展他们的大肌肉运动技能。