Millennium Post

Better co-ordination may boost child’s academic performanc­e

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IF YOUR CHILD has better eye-to-hand co-ordination then he or she is more likely to achieve higher scores in reading, writing and maths, a new study has found.

The findings, published in the journal Psychologi­cal Science, raises the possibilit­y that schools could provide extra support to children who are clumsy.

“The study identifies the important relationsh­ip between a child’s ability to physically interact with their environmen­t and their cognitive developmen­t, those skills needed by the child to think about and understand the world around them,” said coauthor Mark Mon-williams, Professor at the University of Leeds in Britain.

For the study, the researcher­s examined over 300 children aged 4-11, who took part in computer tasks to measure their co-ordination and intercepti­ve timing – their ability to interact with a moving object.

The tasks designed to measure eye-to-hand coordinati­on involved steering, taking aim and tracking objects on a computer screen.

In the ‘intercepti­ve timing’ task, the children had to hit a moving object with an on-screen bat. This task taps into a fundamenta­l cognitive ability – how the brain predicts the movement of objects through time and space.

The researcher­s suggest that this skill may have provided the evolutiona­ry foundation­s for the emergence of cognitive abilities related to mathematic­s.

After controllin­g for age, the researcher­s found that the children who did better at the eye-to-hand coordinati­on tasks tended to have higher academic attainment in reading, writing and maths.

Those with the best performanc­e at the ‘steering task’ in particular were on average nine months ahead of classmates who struggled.

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