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Sports Education & Participation College Notes (PAMIN07)

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Sport Education & Participation____________________________________

Introduction || Lecture 1
why PE in the educational curriculum:
1.​ early mastery of basic motor skills
2.​ understand and value physical activity and a physical active lifestyle
3.​ later participation in physical activity and sport/reduce sedentary behavior
4.​ knowledge and insight on principles such as rules of the game, fair play
5.​ tactical awareness
6.​ awareness of the body
7.​ social awareness and teamwork

sport context [history]
– beginning 20th century
from mid 19th century first sport clubs and associations:
-​ start of championships and links with obligatory military service (elite males)
– post war (1960)
-​ dominated by competition amongst sports clubs
-​ selection, training and competition
-​ male dominated
-​ youth sports very similar to adult sports
– 2000 until the current time
-​ more variety in types of activities, organizations, suppliers (commercial), own rules
-​ more participation in different groups (male/female, young/old & able/disabled)
-​ differentiation within sports
-​ special adaptations for children and disabled (e.g. peanutball → slagbal)

physical education since 1900
→ current PE has little attention to newer stuf (hoverboards) and stays conservative

,claims of PE since 1900
> beginning 20th century
​ physical: functioning of the body and posture
​ social: social order, preventing delinquint behavior
affective: cheerful and joyous spirit, expression of emotion
educational: mental (e.g. development of memory, habits, of self-discipline and order,
concentration, determination)
> post war (1960)
physical: physical fitness (e.g. performance based, endurance, flexibility, strength) and skill
development
​ social: also working class children
affective: emotional growth, expression
educational: academic scores (not harm cognition)
> 2000 until the current time
physical: physical fitness (e.g. ameliorating effects of sedentary lifestyles, cardiovascular
endurance, body competition) and skill development
​ social: social good for all (e.g. a common denominator)
affective: motivation, anxiety, confidence
educational: positive effects on cognition

claims of PE: physical development
1.​ fitness
-​ limited evidence of PE effects: bone strength (+), cardiovascular diseases, blood
pressure and childhood obesity (?)
-​ it is also not known which characteristics of PE are beneficial and which not
-​ time in PE usually not sufficient for substantial health effects (60 min per day MVPA)
-​ focus PE on physical fitness not sufficient for achieving an active lifestyle: need to
gain appropriate knowledge, understanding and behavioural skills
2.​ fundamental movement skills (FMS)
-​ locomotor (skipping, hopping, jumping), manipulative (throwing, catching, striking)
& body-management (balancing, rolling)
-​ proficiency barrier:
-​ level necessary to access a wide range of physical activities
-​ necessary for development of sport specific skills
-​ common misconception: FMS will develop naturally through maturation
-​ influenced by environmental factors: equipment, cues and feedback etc. (lecture 2)

, claims of PE: social
-​ PE as a suitable vehicle for promoting personal and social responsibility and social skills:
-​ trust, empathy, sense of community, cooperation etc
-​ role of the teacher central (respectful, honest, fair, act as role model)
-​ some evidence for the development of:
1.​ skills such as cooperation, teamwork
2.​ improve attendance, behavior and attitudes within schools
3.​ reduction of antisocial behavior
-​ uncertainty of the extent of the impact (lack of studies)
-​ need for a greater understanding of the mechanism (change process)

claims of PE: affective (lecture 3)
-​ synonymous with psychological and emotional well-being
-​ mental health. self-esteem, coping skills, intrinsic motivation, sense of autonomy,
preference, choice, aspirations, attitudes, identity etc.
-​ strong evidence:
1.​ positive effect of sport on self-esteem and enjoyment
2.​ however, strong individual differences (peer of family influences, lack of
opportunities, individual experiences)
3.​ key elements: experiences of personal success/development, rich variety of
activities, sufficient opportunity to practice, motivational climate towards task
mastery
-​ less evidence for the other outcomes: mechanisms unclear and questions for pedagogy
within activities

claims of PE: cognitive (lecture 3)
-​ no reduction in academic performance of more PE-time in the curriculum
-​ various mechanisms possible: increased generation, concentration, increased arousal, brain
development

general reflection on level of evidence:
-​ a number of claims are made about the broad educational impact of PESS upon young
people; there is a prevailing belief that engagement in PESS is, somehow, a good thing
-​ robust evidence is needed to test some of the claims made for the benefits of PESS, but the
accumulation of evidence suggests that PESS can have some/many benefits for some/many
pupils, given the right social, contextual and pedagogical circumstances
-​ different – or better – research is needed to focus on the contexts and processes that are
most likely to exploit the potential, if any, of the PESS learning environment for young
people’s educational benefit
-​ often evidence stems from the association between physical activity and physical, social,
affective or cognitive outcomes
-​ only few robust, large scale, longitudinal studies: not possible to have a relevant control
group with no PE
-​ teaching methods often assessed by means of single case studies: interviews with teachers
applying the new methods

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