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Life Skills are defined as a set of skills that people use to effectively deal with life challenges. Life challenges for children and youth can include making informed decisions about alcohol, tobacco, and other substances, learning the importance of healthy relationships, physical fitness, nutrition and peaceful conflict resolution. It can also help reduce negative social learning such as delinquent behavior, risky sexual behavior, peer rejection and emotional disorders. However, simply telling children that it is right to make healthy choices is not enough to ensure that they will do so.
Teaching Life Skills cannot only benefit the individual but can create a healthier community. Practicing Life Skills leads to positive results. Learning by doing is the most effective method of learning, therefore why teaching Life Skills through physical education and sport can be an effective way to foster healthy development.
Life Skills can be grouped into three categories as suggested by UNICEF
Communication and Interpersonal Skills focus on areas such as developing skills in communication, negotiation, refusal, empathy, cooperation and teamwork and advocacy. Examples of implementing questions into the activity:
Decision Making and Critical Thinking Skills involve students creatively and critically examining a problem and making decisions that not only positively benefit themselves, but others and their environment in a way that does not harm others in the process. Examples of implementing questions into the activity:
Coping and Self Management Skills include developing skills for increasing internal locus of control, managing feelings and managing of stress. Examples of implementing questions into the activity:
Teaching Life Skills Life Skills are often over looked as we put more importance on teaching motor movements, tactics, strategies, and fostering an overall understanding of the game. Teaching Life Skills may be a little more difficult then other skills, as we have to observe the activity and choose where there is opportunity for life skill learning. However, games are both a safe and concrete way to demonstrate the importance of vital Life Skills and provide participants with an opportunity to practice, develop and then transfer these skills to other areas outside of sport and physical activity.
How does PlaySport help foster the development of Life Skills? Using developmental and lead-up games helps provide a non-threatening learning environment that allows all students to participate. Ways to foster Life Skills are strategically placed throughout all the PlaySport activities. The purpose of PlaySport is "teaching kids games by playing games." True to this approach, key reflection questions posed by instructors and/or the participants are posed under the Life Skills section of each game. After playing the game for a few minutes (or at the end of a game), instructors can ask the group to reflect on key questions related to the development of critical Life Skills. The questions are focused around why certain skills are not only important to help improve performance in a particular game (e.g., why is it important to cooperate with others to complete the task), but also why a particular skills is important in other sports and life (e.g., why is it important to cooperate with others in school or in your community?). Instructors should also feel free to make modifications to games to focus on issues particularly relevant to the participants. For example if the Life Skill was communication, then perhaps participants would not be allowed to talk during an activity followed by asking them to do the opposite and communicate clearly to other team members and as often as possible. In other words, the PlaySport game becomes a vehicle to bring to life through demonstration the importance of Life Skills both within and outside the game itself.
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