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40 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
- 3rd side (hint)
Where can you practice PT? |
•Out patient clinics • Acute Care • Sports clinics/team
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What does it take to become a PT? |
• Doctorate • 3 years of academic coursework • Doctoral research project • Clinical internship |
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How many experience hours do you need to become a PT? |
From 100-400 hours at 1-4 places
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What should your letter of rec include? |
• Your character • Communication skills • Background |
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Who should you get your letters of rec from? |
• From one professor • One licensed PT who has seen your work • One employer or another PT • From people you know well |
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Personal essay should be.... |
Your time to paint a picture of yourself |
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Philosophy thinking in PA is... |
Reflection is key |
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What is Metaphysics? |
The branch that distinguishes one thing from another |
Metamorfosis |
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What is Epistemology? |
It examines how we know things and with what assurance we can claim something is true |
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What is Axiology? |
The study of the value of things |
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What is ethics? |
How we should behave; right from wrong |
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How are sports duty like? |
• They help us advance in desirable ways • Are healthy • Workouts are important |
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What are the values promoted in kin? |
• Health related physical fitness • knowledge about the human body, PA, health practices, motor skill development • PA for fun |
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What are some ethic violations? |
• Wrong treatment of opponents • Substance abuse • Deceiving officials |
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What are the types of reasoning? |
• Deductive • Inductive • Descriptive |
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What’s deductive reasoning? |
Broad factual premises to specific conclusions |
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What is inductive reasoning? |
Specific cases to general principles |
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What’s descriptive reasoning? |
One example of some phenomenon and then vary it to see how dramatically it changes (trial and error) |
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What is materialism? |
The human being is nothing more than a complex machine made of atoms; subjective experiences are real but have no power |
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What is dualism? |
The mind and body are separate; out thoughts count; priority is given to the mind |
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What is holism? |
The mind and body are interdependent; mind and body work together |
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What do sports showcase? |
They show motor skills |
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Sport participation is justified by? |
It’s intrinsic value |
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What’s a motor? |
A machine used to convert one form of energy into mechanical energy |
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What are motor skills? |
Functions that involve the precise movement of muscles with the intent to perform a specific act |
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What is motor behavior? |
The study of how motor skills are learned, controlled, and developed to assist people as they practice and experience PA |
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For who is motor behavioral valuable for? |
For performers and those who teach motor skills |
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What’s the information processing model? |
• Brain (computer) • Spinal cord (wiring) • Muscles (printers) |
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What’s the goal of motor behavior research? |
For response selection and response execution |
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What are the three sub disciplines of motor behavior? |
• Motor learning • Motor control • Motor development |
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What are the two principles of motor learning? |
• Correct practice • Augmented feedback |
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What is correct practice? |
It improves performance and supports learning |
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What’s augmented feedback? |
Enhanced practice and learning |
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When is a skill learned? |
When you can perform the skill after some time |
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How do we learn? |
By practicing and getting feedback |
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What does it mean to get feedback? |
• It’s given during practice • Critical veritable for skill acquisition • Intrinsic • Extrinsic |
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What’s knowledge of performance? |
Information provided to a performer, indicating the quality or patterning of their movement |
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Knowledge of results |
Extrinsic information provided to a performer after a response, indicating the success of their actions with regard to a goal |
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What is the ultimate goal of feedback? |
To allow performers to correct their own performance |
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What is gait adaptability? |
The ability to change locomotor patterns in response to individual task or environmental changes |
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