Environmental continuum in sport
Sports skills can be classified according to how much they are affected by the sporting environment.
Examples of environmental stimuli In sport, external factors that performers cannot control which affect their skills. are:
- other people 鈥 for example, a netballer reacting to their own and the other team's players
- terrain/surface 鈥 for example, a cross-country runner running on muddy and dry ground
- weather 鈥 for example, a golfer playing on a windy day
- situation 鈥 for example, the venue and crowd
Performers need to have a good perceptionAwareness of external factors. of these stimuli to adapt their skills to best suit the environment.
The two different characteristics of the environmental continuum are 'closed' and 'open'.
Closed skills are skills that are not affected by the environment. They are usually self-pacedA skill that is initiated or controlled solely by the performer. and occur in fixed or predictable situations. The performer uses exactly the same technique every time and is in control of what happens next. An example would be a gymnast performing a floor routine.
Open skills are skills affected by the environment. They are mainly perceptual and usually externally pacedA skill in which the timing and form are affected by factors outside the control of the performer.. They occur when performers have to make decisions and adapt their skills to a changing or unpredictable environment. The performer is not in control of what will happen next. An example would be making a pass in Ultimate Frisbee.
Most skills are not totally closed or open but range between the two. They are somewhere on the environmental continuum between open and closed.
Question
Give two reasons why an indoor basketball free throw could be classed as a closed skill.
Any two of the following:
- it occurs in a fixed/predictable situation
- it is self-paced
- it is indoors so not affected by weather conditions
- the same technique is used every time