CSET Exam 2025: Growth, Motor
Development, Motor Learning| Complete
Questions and Answers| 100%
A 3rd grade PE teacher notices one of the students consistently struggles to skip and gallop
compared to peers.
That student might be in the late stages of fundamental motor skill development, especially
for locomotor skills. It's common around age 7–8 to see big differences in coordination timing.
A toddler learning to walk keeps falling when turning corners.
That’s a normal part of early motor development. They haven’t developed dynamic balance
yet, especially when changing direction or stopping.
A high school coach has athletes do drills that gradually go from easy to more complex.
This is using the principle of progressive skill acquisition—start simple to build confidence
and then increase complexity as they improve.
A preschool child can throw a ball forward but can't yet catch it when tossed gently.
Catching involves more advanced perceptual-motor coordination. It usually develops after
throwing, so that’s expected in the preschool years.
During a motor learning lab, a student is asked to perform a skill with their eyes closed.
That’s testing proprioception—our sense of body position without relying on vision.
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A 6-year-old can hop on one foot but struggles with skipping.
Skipping is a combination of hopping and stepping in rhythm, which is more complex and
usually comes later than hopping.
A child practicing dribbling shows improvement only during the session but forgets it the next
day.
That suggests performance improved temporarily, but learning hasn’t occurred yet—real
learning means the skill sticks over time.
A therapist gives a child a reward every time they correctly complete a movement.
That’s using extrinsic feedback to reinforce behavior. It helps early on, but you’ll want to
fade it so they rely more on intrinsic feedback.
After several practices, a student starts improving only when feedback is delayed by a few
seconds.
That delay forces the student to process what they did and develop their own sense of what
felt right—helps long-term learning.
A student shows great improvement after practicing 10 short sessions over 5 days vs one long
session.
That’s distributed practice, which helps motor learning more than massed practice because it
avoids fatigue and allows better consolidation.