In 2015, the United Nations General Assembly identified 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to be achieved by the year 2030. The study’s main objective is to identify the necessary conditions and potential for ensuring both the sustainability and competitiveness of tourism in seaside and marine resorts located in or at coastal and marine protected areas on the example of Karklė (Lithuania). Based on the results of a benchmarking study of five South Baltic resorts using the Delphi technique, the survey team identified the main deficiencies of Karklė as a seaside and marine resort of an international scale. We address the deficiencies by applying a geographical information system as a decision-support tool for the Littoral Regional Park where Karklė is located. We conclude that for ensuring both the sustainability and competitiveness of tourism in seaside and marine resorts, it is expedient to combine the Delphi-based tourism benchmarking with integrated coastal management and maritime spatial planning, for which GIS is an indispensable tool.
The ultimate aim of self-control is to focus attention on physical, spiritual, and social health. Self-control abilities facilitate the improvement of mental balance and mental health, assist the development of academic skills and knowledge, and shape inner harmony of a child. Physical education at a junior school age is one of the underused possibilities for the development of selfcontrol abilities. J. Liukkonen (2007), B. Zimmerman, A. Kitsantas (2005) claim that use of the self-control strategy during physical education classes allows a person to control emotions and effectively improve one's physical abilities. Research aim-to reveal the effect of self-control model on self-control and physical abilities of junior school learners at the age of 10-11. Research methods: literature review, pedagogical experiment, qualitative content analysis. Analysis of research results is based on a pedagogical experiment conducted during 2011-2012 with IV grade learners of general education schools in Klaipeda, Kaunas and Raseiniai (Lithuania) cities. Qualitative research had a sample of 24 experimental group learners. The fundamental manifest and latent content meaning and defined data categories attest to the positive dynamics of the following self-control abilities: ability to assess the parameters of physical fitness, ability to understand one's physical activity, ability to apply different self-control strategies, ability to apply psychosocial self-control abilities in practice, motivation for improving one's physical abilities, and satisfaction due to emotional and behavioral self-control. KEYWORDS: self-control, physical education, junior school learners. Ability learning in game situations Reflection and verbal assessment of activity Application of the ability in everyday life situations STAGES OF EDUCATION
This study examines the expression of self-efficacy, academic motivation, study satisfaction of prospective physical education teachers in different years of study, their interrelationships and intends to explain how studies help prospective physical education teachers shape their professional identities. A questionnaire survey was administered to 783 1st to 4th year undergraduate physical education students from four Lithuanian universities. The year of study did not affect changes in students’ self-efficacy expectations and intrinsic academic motivation, which may mean that such professional identity indicators are less affected by contextual factors. The correlations among the analysed variables showed that the quality of teaching, clear goals, and the maintenance of autonomy are essential components of the academic environment in order to strengthen the prospective PE teacher’s professional identity. The results of the study may encourage physical education teacher educators’ deeper analysis of the ongoing feedback on student satisfaction with their studies as an emotional PI indicator.
D. P. Hallahan and J. M. Kauffman (2003) define self-control as an ability of an individual to regulate own behavior (application of strategies solving problems) and this is linked with metacognition. Skills of meta-cognition are abilities of self-control, which are mastered while learning; this embraces thoughts about what we know and how we regulate learning. There exists a mutual link between development of self-control and physical abilities: while developing self-control abilities, it is possible to better cultivate school students’ physical abilities, to teach them movements because self-control enables them to better penetrate in general cognitive strategies. On the other hand, developing children’s physical abilities, favorable conditions for improvement of school students’ self-control abilities are established. However, the influence of self-control development at primary school age has not been widely researched and few works on researches in primary learners in the context of their physical education have been published. The goal of the research – to reveal dynamics of change in primary school learners’ physical abilities and links with development of self-control abilities during the period of experiment, applying experimental programme for self-control abilities development during lessons of physical culture. The methods of the research: analysis of literature sources; questionnaire survey; testing; mathematical statistics: research data were analysed applying the coefficient of Cronbach Alfa, Pearson correlation analysis, Student’s t-criterion, MannWhitney U criterion. Statistical data analysis was conducted employing the statistical analysis package SPSS 19. The methodology of the research. The method of questionnaire survey evaluated dynamics of changes in self-control abilities, whereas testing method measured changes in physical abilities. The questionnaire for self-control evaluation (targeted at assessment of physical, emotional and social control) was designed on the basis of the Lithuanian Physical Culture Programme ‘To Grow and to Strengthen’ and the Social Skills Inventory by R. E. Riggio and H. S. Friedman. Dynamics of physical abilities was measured applying the following tests: ‘sit and reach’–for flexibility, ‘standing jump’– for explosive force, ‘10x5 shuttle run’– for agility, 20 m run’ – for velocity, ‘sit up and lie down’ – for trunk force (abdominal muscle endurance), ‘Flamingo balance fitness test’-for balance. These test were selected following the Methodology for Testing of Physical Capacity of Lithuanian Inhabitants and Establishment of their Physical Condition (2007) and the Lithuanian Physical Culture Programme ‘To Grow and to Strengthen’ (2004). All the measurements were obtained twice: before and after the experiment. The organization of the research. The pedagogical experiment was conducted in fourth forms of secondary schools in Klaipėda, Kaunas and Raseiniai in the school year of 2011–2012. The duration of the pedagogical experiment was one school year. The schools were selected following the criteria-based principle of sampling, taking into account teacher’s qualification, number of classes and agreement to participate in the experiment. The research sample initially included 203 learners but in the course of the research their number changed and the final sample consisted of 178 school students, who were divided into experimental (n = 85) and control (n = 93) groups. The results of the research. The research revealed a positive impact of the programme for development of self-control abilities on dynamics of change in physical abilities. Statistically significant differences (p < 0.05) were observed between physical abilities in experimental and control groups: long jump, agility, velocity, abdominal muscle power and endurance results between boys in E and C groups; long jump, velocity, balance, abdominal muscle power and endurance results among girls. The norms of scales for evaluation of self-control abilities were established (Cronbach’s Alpha 0.911 (n = 37)). The self-control abilities were divided into physical (Cronbach’s Alpha 0,866 (n = 19) and psychosocial self-control (Cronbach’s Alpha 0.866 (n = 18). It was established that self-control abilities of 10–11 year old boys and girls differ: in most cases girls show greater skills of psychosocial self-control (p < 0.01). They are able to better follow the rules of the game (p < 0.001), to keep their promises and obligations (p < 0.01), to make themselves behave as if it is pleasant (p < 0.05), to get on well with other people (p < 0.001), to evaluate well-being (p < 0.01), mood (p < 0.05), flexibility (p < 0.05) and dress up appropriately for the weather (p < 0.01). Compared to the girls, boys more frequently are able to control own fears and anxiety (p < 0.01). The least developed abilities of self-control include the ability to evaluate the pulse and to understand own physical activity. School students, who possess greater skills of psychosocial self-control, also show better indicators of certain physical abilities. The established linear correlation links indicate relationship between the following psychosocial self-control and physical abilities: flexibility, explosive force, velocity, endurance and balance. Development of self-control abilities produces an effect on development of physical skills. The analysis of the variables in the scale of psychosocial self-control allows concluding that school learners, who are able to control themselves and do not reveal their soreness (p < 0.01) and are able to adjust to various requirements (p < 0.05), demonstrate better balance skills; children, who are able to notice and evaluate fatigue and frequency of pulse, show better endurance skills. This is very important developing school students’ physical abilities in lessons of physical culture.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.