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    • Ágora para la educación física y el deporte
    • Ágora para la educación física y el deporte - 2018 - Vol. 20-1
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    • Ágora para la educación física y el deporte - 2018 - Vol. 20-1
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    Por favor, use este identificador para citar o enlazar este ítem:http://uvadoc.uva.es/handle/10324/31804

    Título
    La enseñanza y el entrenamiento deportivo desde un enfoque «Constraint-Led». ¿Puede el retorno al futuro afrontar la idea de que «para jugar, lo primero son los fundamentos»?
    Autor
    Renshaw, Ian
    Moy, Brendan
    Editor
    Ediciones Universidad de ValladolidAutoridad UVA
    Año del Documento
    2018
    Documento Fuente
    Ágora para la Educación Física y el Deporte; Vol. 20 Núm. 1 (2018): Enero-abril pags. 1-26
    Abstract
    Despite the continued popularity of Games Centred Approaches with tertiary level academics, the take-up by practitioners has been limited. In a recent survey of entry level HPE students undertaken at our university, 95% reported that they had received a predominantly traditional experience in school physical education lessons. This finding is in line with a common response when we engage with practitioners who strongly advocate the need for games players to learn the basics before they can play a game. In this paper we will present concepts and practical exemplars demonstrating a Constraint-Led Approach (CLA) to games teaching and coaching. We will show that adopting a CLA has the potential to provide practitioners with the tools to address this significant barrier and potentially enhance the adoption of games-based approaches. We will argue that the technique-tactics dichotomy is a redundant framework as the intentions and actions of learners is a function of their current action capabilities. However, we will also propose that games-based practitioners need to develop pedagogical practices that initially develop intra-individual-environment co-ordination before moving onto a more traditional focus on inter-individual-environment co-ordination (i.e., how teams organise to solve games-based problems). A key focus will be on the need to consider the mutuality of the individual and the environment and how backyard games allied to CLA methods can help practitioners design better games based programmes that will meet the needs of all games players irrespective of age or ability level.
    ISSN
    1989-7200
    DOI
    10.24197/aefd.1.2018.1-26
    Version del Editor
    https://revistas.uva.es/index.php/agora/article/view/2050
    Idioma
    eng
    URI
    http://uvadoc.uva.es/handle/10324/31804
    Derechos
    openAccess
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    Universidad de Valladolid

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