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E-grāmata: Transformative Learning and Teaching in Physical Education

Edited by (The University of Edinburgh, UK)
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Transformative Learning and Teaching in Physical Education explores how learning and teaching in physical education might be improved and how it might become a meaningful component of young people’s lives. With its in-depth focus on physical education within contemporary schooling, the book presents a set of professional perspectives that are pivotal for realising high-quality learning and teaching for physical education.

With contributions from a range of international academics, chapters critically engage with vital issues within contemporary physical education. These include examples of complex learning principles in action, which are discussed as a method for bettering our understanding of various learning and teaching endeavours, and which often challenge hierarchical and behaviourist notions of learning that have long held a strong foothold in physical education. Authors also engage with social-ecological theories in order to help probe the complex circumstances and tensions which many teachers face in their everyday work environments, where they witness first-hand the contrast between discourses which espouse transformational change and the realities of their routine institutional arrangements.

This book enables readers to engage in a fuller way with transformative ideas and to consider their wider implications for contemporary physical education. Its set of professional perspectives will be of great interest to academics, policymakers, teacher educators and teachers in the fields of physical education, health and well-being. It will also be a useful resource for postgraduate students studying in these subject areas.

Recenzijas

This text provides an innovative perspective on the role of transformative physical education teaching and learning within the complex school context. Transformation is a lofty goal that builds valued and sustainable pedagogical change on a solid foundation of theory, practice and context. These authors, working from a critical perspective, first discuss the issues and challenges, and then give meaningful presentations of rich and refreshing curricular alternatives and practices with the potential to transform physical education to positively affect learning. - Catherine D. Ennis, Professor, Department of Kinesiology, University of North Carolina at Greensboro, USA

Nowadays schools are tough places. Much is expected of them by governments, broader society and parents. The authors of this collection believe that school PE, well taught by teachers employing critical pedagogies, can be a transformative learning experience for young people. Transformative Learning and Teaching in Physical Education is no toolkit-type book offering teachers advice on what to teach and how to teach. The collection engages the reader across four dimensions of society, theory, schools and practice. It offers an activist perspective that is research-based and practice informed. Careful not to overstate their case, contributors to this collection offer both hope and an aspiration for teachers and graduate students alike. This is a book that needs to be read by prospective teachers, teachers and teacher educators alike. - Richard Tinning, Emeritus Professor, School of Human Movement & Nutrition Sciences, University of Queensland, Australia

Acknowledgements vii
List of contributors
ix
List of abbreviations
xiii
Introduction 1(8)
PART I The societal perspective
9(34)
1 Physical education, economic liberalism and the free market: Professional changes ahead?
11(15)
Malcolm Thorburn
2 Aims and values in physical education: Can rival traditions of physical education ever be resolved?
26(17)
Steven A. Stolz
Malcolm Thorburn
PART II The theoretical perspective
43(34)
3 The transformational wind of theoretical change: An historic and contemporary view of physical education
45(16)
Mike Jess
Matthew Atencio
4 The primary school teacher perspective: Using an ecological framework and complexity principles as the basis for analysing teachers' professionalism
61(16)
Mike Jess
Nicola Carse
Jeanne Keay
PART III The school perspective
77(44)
5 Start young: The possibilities of primary physical education
79(14)
Mike Jess
6 Physical education teachers as agents of policy and curriculum change
93(16)
Justine Maclean
7 The role professional learning communities play in school-based curriculum development
109(12)
Andrew Horrell
Rosemary Mulholland
PART IV The practice perspective
121(72)
8 Creating autonomy-supportive learning environments to improve health and wellbeing in physical education
123(16)
Shirley Gray
Kevin Mitchell
C.K. John Wang
9 Pedagogy for motivation, learning and development in physical education
139(20)
Shirley Gray
Kevin Morgan
John Sproule
10 Understanding physical education teachers' day-to-day practice: Challenging the `unfair' picture
159(17)
Paul McMillan
11 The digitised future of physical education: Activity trackers, biosensors and algorithmic biopedagogies
176(17)
Ben Williamson
PART V A futures perspective
193(26)
12 Past, present, and possible futures
195(18)
Steven A. Stolz
13 Conclusion
213(6)
Malcolm Thorburn
Index 219
Malcolm Thorburn is a lecturer in Education and Physical Education at the Moray House School of Education, University of Edinburgh. He has taught extensively in secondary schools and occupied a number of curriculum development roles at local authority and national level. He has also published widely on aims and values, policy and professionalism and planning and practice issues in education and physical education.