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Physical Development in Preschool Children (page 4)

By C. Seefeldt|B.A. Wasik
Pearson Allyn Bacon Prentice Hall

Gross motor skills are becoming more agile and coordinated. They can combine running with skipping, hopping, and jumping. Depending on the social and cultural context, some five-year-olds begin to ride a two-wheeler and begin to master the eye-hand coordination needed to swing a bat to hit a ball. Five-year-olds do everything with a lot of motion. “Walk, don’t run!” is repeated in every kindergarten class numerous times each day. Overconfidence in their physical abilities also presents challenges. A five-year-old teeters on a narrow curb in the park as if he were walking on a balance beam. They want to swing as high as they can and dive down a slide as fast as possible.

Although keeping still is difficult, five-year-olds can be expected to listen quietly while a story is being read, walk carefully down steps at school while using the railing for assistance, and pay attention while someone is speaking to them (Ignico & Wayda, 1999). Classroom routines can help promote orderly excitement and interest in learning for five-year-olds.

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