Fundamental movement skills [FMS] form the basis for daily living as well as for participation in physical activities. Young children already benefit from good coordination and control of movement when engaged in physical activity, play, sports and social interactions (Larkin and Summers, 2004). Although motor development is a process continuing throughout life, early childhood is the optimal phase to learn and develop FMS (Gallahue and Ozmun, 2006). This development is established through an interactive process of aspects related to the individual, the task and the environment (Newell, 1985). These aspects include biological and other personal variables (physical growth, maturation, gender, motivation), environmental variables (neighborhood surroundings, socio-economic status [SES], socializing agents), variables of practice (experience, exercise) and task variables (Barreiros, 2008). During the past decades, motor development research has primarily focused on motor impairment among children (Yoon et al., 2006), for which various assessment tools have been developed. These tools usually assess quantitative aspects of movement skill tasks and focus on the Children’s skill performance which reflects the ‘product’ of the movement on the performed task. Mostly these tools specifically focus on early detection and charting of deficits in the development of the perceptual-motor system (Bruininks and Bruininks, 2005; Henderson et al., 2007; Smits-Engelsman et al., 1998; Zimmer and Volkamer, 1987). Other tests assess the qualitative aspects of the movement skill tasks and focus on the movements of the Children’s body parts during task performance which emphasizes on the ‘process’ of the movement task (Burton and Miller, 1998). These tools help to identify difficulties in the Children’s movement behavior itself. In the school context, a third kind of assessment tool has been developed: pupil monitoring instruments (SIG, 2005; van Gelder and Stroes, 2002). These tools are used to control to what extent individual preschool children meet the curricular developmental goals. A number of these tools are currently used by Flemish preschool teachers to follow up Children’s individual progress in movement skills. The advantage of these instruments is that they show individual task shortcomings. The disadvantage is that they do not provide a general estimate of the child’s developmental movement skill status. The opportunity to centralize these data to obtain an overall view of movement skill development among preschool children has remained largely unexplored. As stated before, structured child assessment would be valuable because movement skill performance assessment in preschool children contributes to an early and broad insight to Children’s movement skill development. Movement skill assessment tools might provide additional information on Children’s movement skill difficulties and effectiveness. To monitor and assess movement skill development and performance in individual children as well as in larger samples of the population, reliable and valid instruments are required. Van Waelvelde et al., 2007 indicate that movement skill assessment of preschool children is a topic of research that can benefit from additional independent validity and reliability studies of currently used assessment protocols for various populations. This study therefore compares (a) the MOT 4-6 and (b) the M-ABC assessment protocol’s results. Both assessment protocols are included in the non-limitative list of motor assessment protocols of the Belgian social security service (RIZIV, 2002). Their characteristics will be briefly discussed. The MOT 4-6 (Zimmer and Volkamer, 1987) has promising assets to be used in fieldwork. The assessment protocol is accessible, easy to use and specifically designed for preschool children. The tool has a high assessment protocol efficiency which becomes evident by its favorable assessment protocol item/time proportion. The substantial number and broad spectrum of assessment protocol items included in the MOT 4-6 meets one of the assessment tool criteria as outlined by Netelenbos, 2001. Another advantage of the protocol is that gross as well as fine movement skill assessment items have been included, which completes the physical activity (PA) related skill practice. However, subscales for fine and gross movement skill performance are not included in the MOT 4-6 protocol. The assessment protocol’s specific preschool child orientation is reflected by the attractive character of assessment protocol items and the variation in the order in which different tasks follow one another during the assessment. The absence of an English translated version creates a language barrier that may have led to limited assessment protocol use. Following this limitation, very few additional studies have been performed on the psychometric qualities of the assessment protocol including validity and reliability studies. Except for the data provided in the MOT 4-6 assessment protocol manual, further psychometric data is scarce (Cools et al., 2009a). M-ABC assessment protocol (Henderson and Sugden, 1992), on the contrary, is widely used in movement skill assessment among young children. For this tool, more extensive research on psychometric qualities is available (Barnett and Henderson, 1998). One of the main reasons for this availability of research is the M- ABC’s international character. We decided to compare the MOT 4-6 protocol with the M-ABC protocol because the latter is widely used. The aim of this study was to examine the screening agreement between the MOT 4-6 (Zimmer and Volkamer, 1987) and the M-ABC assessment protocol (Smits-Engelsman, 1998). This study investigated convergent validity between the fine, gross and total movement skill scores. Agreement on identification of children with motor difficulties was investigated and individual assessment protocol item correlations were used to clarify possible assessment protocol differences. Additionally, discriminant validity between gross and fine motor constructs and the total scores within each assessment protocol were studied. Research on usability of psychomotor assessment protocols in Flemish preschool children is scarce and limited (Vanvuchelen, 2005). Therefore, this study also aimed to fill up this gap. |