Rhythmic Gymnastics Activities on Gross Motor Development in Early Childhood
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.59653/ijmars.v4i01.2156Keywords:
rhythmic gymnastics, development, gross motor skills, early childhoodAbstract
Early childhood gross motor development is crucial to support physical activity, coordination, and independence, as stipulated in Law No. 20 of 2003 concerning the National Education System, which emphasizes physical stimulation from an early age. Early observations showed a lack of structured activities, such as rhythmic gymnastics, in early childhood education, leading to gross motor delays in skills like jumping and running, even though conventional activities were available. Rhythmic gymnastics, with musical accompaniment and rhythmic movements, is considered effective in stimulating large muscles based on the theories of Gallahue and Ozmun. The study aims to test the effectiveness of rhythmic gymnastics with the theme "Great Indonesian Children" compared with conventional gymnastics in improving the gross motor development of children aged 5-6 years. Focus on significant pretest-posttest differences between experimental and control groups to prove the effect of the intervention. This study uses a quasi-experimental design, specifically a Nonequivalent Control Group Design. The experimental group received the rhythmic gymnastics of Anak Indonesia Hebat (2-3 times/week, 30-45 minutes), while the control group received conventional gymnastics. Data were collected through pretest-posttest observations using sheets based on indicators of balance, coordination, agility, and strength. The analysis included descriptive statistics (mean, N-Gain), the Shapiro-Wilk normality test, Levene's test of homogeneity, and the Wilcoxon Signed-Rank and Rank-Sum Tests R RStudio. The experimental group showed an average increase from 38.12 (pretest) to 77.08 (posttest), a moderate-to-high N-Gain (75% moderate, 25% high), and a significant difference (p=0.002459). The control group increased from 38.75 to 41.46, but the N-Gain was low and insignificant (p=0.07006). The difference between the posttest groups was significant (p=3.134e-05, Wilcoxon Rank-Sum). The rhythmic gymnastics activity Anak Indonesia Hebat significantly improves the gross motor skills of children aged 5-6 years, outperforming conventional methods. Implications: Integrate thematic gymnastics into the PAUD curriculum to optimize physical development, support advanced research on external factors, and provide teacher training in Indonesia.
Downloads
References
Adi, S. 2018. The Basic Forms of the Seamanm Movement. Malang: State University of Malang.
Agusta, H. 2009. Movement Patterns in Gymnastics 1. Jakarta: CV. Ipa Abong.
Ahmad, Y. 2007. Gymnastics. West Jakarta. PT Indahjaya Adipratama.
Alter, J. M. 1996. 300 Sports Stretching Techniques. Jakarta: PT Raja Grafindo Persada.
Arumningtiyas, N. 2017. The Relationship Between Rhythmic Gymnastics and Early Childhood Gross Motor Development in the Kertosari Nation Flower Play Group, Pasrujambe District, Lumajang Regency. Jember: University of Jember.
Bandi, D. 1996. Rhythmic Movement. Bandung: Mitra Grafika.
Decaprio, R. 2017. A Guide to Developing Students' Motor Intelligence. Yogyakarta: DIVA Press.
Ministry of National Education. 2008. Development of Gross Motor Skills in Kindergarten. Jakarta: PT Bumi Aksara.
Meklin, E., Laukkanen, A., Niemistö, D., Kotkajuuri, J., Luukkainen, N. M., & Sääkslahti, A. (2024). Early childhood physical activity parenting and sport club participation as predictors of perceived motor competence–a three-year longitudinal study. Physical Education and Sport Pedagogy, 1-15.
Elizabeth. 1978. Child Development. Jakarta: Erlangga.
Faruk, M., Ali, M., Susilana, R., Dewi, L., Alias, N., Mahardika, I. M. S. U., ... & Pranoto, A. (2025). The interventions of physical education by using augmented reality based mobile learning can significantly improve gross motor skills in elementary school students. Retos, 64, 201-210.
Fitriani, L., Herlina, H., & Burhan, Z. (2025). Revitalization of Physical Education in Developing Gross Motor in Early Childhood. Journal of Educational Assimilation, 3(1), 44–56. https://doi.org/10.61924/jasmin.v3i1.52
Gibson, V., van der Merwe, E., & Coetzee, B. A. (2024). Motor milestones and physical activity: A scoping review of ECD practitioners’ contributions. South African Journal of Childhood Education, 14(1), 1580.
Gunarsa, S.D. 2007. Basics and Theories of Child Development. Jakarta: PT BPK Gunung Mulia.
Hapsari, I, Indri. 2016. Child Developmental Psychology. Jakarta: PT Indeks.
Hasan, I. 2004. Research Data Analysis with Statistics. Jakarta: PT Bumi Aksara. Hasan.
Indrijati, H. 2016. Early Childhood Developmental and Education Psychology. Jakarta: Prenadamedia Group.
Indraswai & Nurbaeti. 2018. Target Score of 100 Daily Repeats of All Lessons. Jakarta: Bmedia Publishers. 47
Jenny, C. 2006. Dance Therapy Movement Activities. Yogyakarta: Frendofio.
Katanić, B., Veljković, A. A., Radaković, R., Mujanović, R., & Prvulović, N. (2025). The association between motor abilities and movement skills with cognitive abilities in preschool children. Retos, 65, 579-588.
Kurniawan, A. W. and Z. Puspitaningtyas. 2016. Quantitative Research Methods. Yogyakarta: Pandiva Buku.
Latif M, et al. 2013. New Orientation of Early Childhood Education Theory and Application. Jakarta: Kencana.
Lengkana, A. S., Muhtar, T., Supriyadi, T., Umar, F., & Sofa, N. S. N. (2025). Multilateral activity model: improving children's gross motor. Retos: nuevas tendencias en educación física, deporte y recreación, (67), 289-300.
López Resa, P., & Moraleda Sepúlveda, E. (2024). Developmental profile in children aged 3–6 years: Down syndrome vs. autism spectrum disorder. Behavioral Sciences, 14(5), 380.
M. 2009. Early Childhood Education (Early Childhood Education). Jogjakarta: DIVA Press (Member of IKAPI).
Marwan, I., & Rohayati, N. (2025). The Effect of Smart Kiddo Games on Fine and Gross Motor Skills in Early Childhood. Tem Journal, 14(1).
Masyhud, M, Sulthon. 2014. Educational Research Methods. Jember: Institute for Management Development and Education Prodesi (LPMPK).
Masyhud, M, Sulthon. 2016. Educational Research Methods. Jember: Institute for Management Development and Education Prodesi (LPMPK).
Meklin, E., Laukkanen, A., Niemistö, D., Kotkajuuri, J., Luukkainen, N. M., & Sääkslahti, A. (2024). Early childhood physical activity parenting and sport club participation as predictors of perceived motor competence–a three-year longitudinal study. Physical Education and Sport Pedagogy, 1-15.
Montotalu, et al. 2005. Play and Children's Games. Jakarta: Open University. Muhajir. 2007. Physical Education, Sports and Health. Jakarta: Ghalia Indonesia Printing.
Nenggala. 2007. Physical Education, Sports, and Health. Bandung: rafindo Media Pratama. Regulation of the Minister of National Education of the Republic of Indonesia Number 146 of 2014.
Okilanda, A., Utama, J., & Putra, A. R. (2025). Learning of gross motor skills based on fun games: a study of coordination development in 5–6-year-old children. Pedagogy of Physical Culture and Sports, 29(4), 233-242.
Permendikbud Kurikulum 2013 tentang Pendidikan Anak Usia Dini. (2013). Early Childhood Education Curriculum. http://paud.kemdikbud.go.id/wp- content/uploads/2016/04/Permendikbud-146-Tahun-2014.pdf. [Accessed March 19, 2019].
Rasolofoson, R. A., Milner, E. M., Mattah, B. J., Brashares, J. S., Fernald, L. H., & Fiorella, K. J. (2025). Fishery access benefits early childhood development through fish consumption and fishing income pathways. World Development, 186, 106819.
Sari, D. A., Kuswanto, C. W., Anhusadar, L., Purnama, S., & Ulfah, M. (2025). Exploring the influence of parental-teacher engagement in play-based mathematical learning on motor development and health outcomes in early childhood. Jurnal Ilmiah Ilmu Terapan Universitas Jambi, 9(3), 941-954.
Tredoux, C., Dawes, A., Mattes, F., Schenk, J. C., Giese, S., Leach, G., ... & Horler, J. (2024). Are South African children on track for early learning? Findings from the South African thrive by five index 2021 survey. Child Indicators Research, 17(2), 601-636.
Utami, N. S., Nurkamto, J., Hidayatullah, M. F., & Yuliarto, H. (2025). Sociocultural-based games enhancing manipulative movement skills in Indonesian kindergartens. Jurnal Cakrawala Pendidikan, 44(3), 626-635.
Veiga, G., Guerreiro, D., Pomar, C., Almeida, G., Rebocho, C., & Marmeleira, J. (2025). Effects of an Outdoor Play-Based Intervention on Preschoolers’ Fundamental Movement Skill Competence: A Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial. Early Education and Development, 36(8), 1809-1820.
Wu, H., Eungpinichpong, W., Ruan, H., Chen, W., Yang, Y., & Dong, X. (2024). Towards sustainable early education practices: A quasi-experimental study on the effects of kindergarten physical education programs on fundamental movement skills and self-regulation in Haikou City, China. Sustainability, 16(4), 1400
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
Categories
License
Copyright (c) 2026 Atirah Ahdal, Herlina, Herman, Wahira, Surya

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms:
- Authors retain copyright and grant the journal right of first publication with the work simultaneously licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike that allows others to share the work with an acknowledgement of the work's authorship and initial publication in this journal.
- Authors are able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the non-exclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), with an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.
- Authors are permitted and encouraged to post their work online (e.g., in institutional repositories or on their website) prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work (See The Effect of Open Access).














