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An assessment of random practice and blocked practice approaches in skills acquisition, retention and transfer in teaching basketball skills to beginners in senior high schools

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dc.contributor.author Srem- Sai, M
dc.date.accessioned 2024-03-08T10:23:04Z
dc.date.available 2024-03-08T10:23:04Z
dc.date.issued 2015
dc.identifier.uri http://41.74.91.244:8080/handle/123456789/2250
dc.description A Thesis in the DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, PHYSICAL EDUCATION, RECREATION AND SPORTS, FACULTY OF SCIENCE EDUCATION”. Submitted to the School of Graduate Studies, University of Education, Winneba in Partial Fulfilment of the Requirements for Award of the Master of Philosophy (Physical Education) Degree. OCTOBER, 2015 en_US
dc.description.abstract The purpose of this study was to assess the involvement of blocked and random practices in acquisition, retention and transfer in teaching basketball skills in Senior High Schools. A quasi-experimental design was used for this study. 60 participants were selected from Presbyterian Senior High School, Accra using simple random and purposive sampling techniques. Participants were assigned (n = 30) to Blocked Practice Group (BPG) and Random Practice Group (RPG) respectively. The study involved teaching and learning of 3 basketball skills in 9 training sessions. The reliability coefficient yielded α = .78 using KR21. Four research questions were answered while 2 hypotheses were tested. Descriptive analysis of means and standard deviations was used to answer the research questions while inferential statistics of ANOVA and T-test was used to test the two hypotheses at 0.05 significant level. Results for acquisition indicated the BPG scored higher means than the RPG in all three skills. Results for retention showed much improved performance by the RPG than the BPG in all 3 skills. For transfer, similar results were obtained. ANOVA test for retention produced the following F-values at p<.05: chest pass 86.01; sidearm pass 44.82; and overhead pass 63.58. For transfer, the F-values at p<.05 were 232.54, 102.84 & 102.01 for chest, sidearm and overhead passes respectively, revealing significant mean differences among the three skills but with the RPG recording more superior values within and between group analyses than the BPG. Independent samples t-test revealed the existence of significant difference between random and blocked practices (t(58) = 17.61, p<.05, 2-tailed) in terms of overall learned skills. It was recommended, that physical educators should adopt BPG when the learning objective is isolated skill learning. RPG should be used when the main objective is based on retention and transfer of knowledge to the competitive milieu or to other related activities en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher University of Education,Winneba en_US
dc.subject Random practice en_US
dc.subject Blocked practice en_US
dc.title An assessment of random practice and blocked practice approaches in skills acquisition, retention and transfer in teaching basketball skills to beginners in senior high schools en_US
dc.type Thesis en_US


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