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The Emergence of a Profession

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Dio Lewis was a radical thinker and dynamic speaker. He developed one of the first American systems that used elements from one or ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Emergence of a Profession


1
The Emergence of a Profession
  • 1885-1930

2
The Scene before 1885
  • PE was certainly NOT unknown before 1885.
  • There was virtually NO Physical Education in
    schools before 1885.
  • 1866-first state legislation requiring PE in
    schools was passed in California.
  • 1825-Charles Beck became the first recognized
    teacher of PE in the US-German Gymnastics

3
Cultural Influences on PE, Sport and Fitness from
1885 to Now.
  • Decline of religious opposition to sport and
    exercise.
  • Early Christian beliefs seriously hindered the
    early development of PE and leisure pursuits.
  • YMCA and others like it helped to lead the belief
    that body and physical pursuits were not opposing
    good Christian values and beliefs.

4
Cultural Influences on PE, Sport and Fitness from
1885 to Now.
  • Immigration
  • Millions of immigrants came to America bringing
    with them new games and new attitudes which
    greatly enriched the sport and fitness culture in
    America.
  • Sport became a mechanism to become acculturated
    as Americans.

5
Cultural Influences on PE, Sport and Fitness from
1885 to Now.
  • Urbanization
  • As immigrants flooded to America, industry
    developed in and around major cities.
  • New activities other than rural activities were
    developed to meet the needs of the urban society.
  • Concentrated population and wealth in the cities
    were necessary for the development of
    professional sports.

6
Cultural Influences on PE, Sport and Fitness from
1885 to Now.
  • Transportation and Communication
  • Railways
  • Telegraph
  • Newspapers-Printing Press
  • Radio
  • Television

7
Cultural Influences on PE, Sport and Fitness from
1885 to Now.
  • Education
  • THE FUNDAMENTAL INFLUENCE.
  • Land Grant Institutions provided greater access
    to university educations.
  • These institutions became the site for the
    development of sport and physical education in
    the 20th Century.
  • High School Education laws passed in the late
    19th Century.

8
Cultural Influences on PE, Sport and Fitness from
1885 to Now.
  • Intellectual Climate
  • 19th Century was one of the most active eras in
    history for the development of IDEAS.
  • These influences were crucial to the emergence of
    sport, fitness, and PE toward the end of the 19th
    Century.

9
The Battle of the SYSTEMS
  • 1885-1900 Marked competition among several
    approaches to what was then called gymnastics
    (now called PE).
  • Competition was for new converts to the systems
    and for places in school and college curricula.

10
The Battle of the SYSTEMS
  • Almost all programs of PE in America were
    gymnastic systems imported from Europe.
  • They were formal approaches to exercise. (Unison
    movement by students)

11
The German System
  • Developed originally by Friedrich Ludwig Jahn.
  • Developed a system that would help build a
    strong, united Germany by balancing academic
    education with PE.
  • Took advantage of outdoor spaces and was
    practiced in an outdoor exercising ground.

12
The German System
  • Exercises and skills were practiced using a
    variety of apparatus horizontal bars, balance
    beams, vertical ropes, ladders, vaulting horses,
    parallel bars.
  • Activities included jumping, climbing, running
    and throwing.
  • Brought to America by three students-Beck Follen,
    and Lieber.

13
The German System
  • Beck was appointed teacher of PE in 1825 at the
    Round Hill School in Massachusetts.
  • Follen hired by Harvard College to set up indoor
    and outdoor gymnasiums.
  • Leiber followed Follen at Harvard and also set up
    the first public swimming pool in Boston in 1827.

14
The German System
  • By 1890, many midwestern schools had adopted the
    German System of Gymnastics as their PE program.

15
The Swedish System
  • Developed in attempt to regain lost national
    pride.
  • Mix of nationalism, education and science.
  • Differed from the German System with its
    therapeutic basis.
  • 1814-Per Henrik Ling assumed the director of the
    Royal Central Institute of Gymnastics in
    Stockholm.

16
The Swedish System
  • Referred to as MEDICAL GYMNASTICS because of its
    developmental-therapeutic emphasis.
  • Complex series of exercises done primarily with
    apparatus such as swinging ladders, rings,
    vaulting bars, and stall bars. Many swinging
    exercises involved ropes.

17
The Swedish System
  • Introduced in America in 1883 by Hartwig Nissen.
  • The Swedish system was incorporated into the
    Boston public schools in 1890.

18
The Beecher System
  • Catherine Beecher founded the Western Female
    Institute, where she developed a system of
    calisthenics and activities that bear her name.
  • The gymnastics systems that had been created were
    too vigorous for women and required too much
    strength. Thus Beecher created this system.

19
The Beecher System
  • Remember that PIETY, PURITY, SUBMISSIVENESS and
    DOMESTICITY were the so called womanly virtues at
    this time.
  • The Beecher system was built around lessons in
    physiology and calisthenics accompanied by music.
    Exercises were designed to produce grace of
    motion, good carriage and sound health.
  • Not widely accepted as it conflicted with the
    ideals of femininity widely held in those days.

20
The Dio Lewis System
  • Dio Lewis was a radical thinker and dynamic
    speaker.
  • He developed one of the first American systems
    that used elements from one or more of the other
    systems.
  • Used musical accompaniment for his exercise
    routines which increased heart rate but werent
    as vigorous as the German system.

21
The Dio Lewis System
  • Used beanbags, wands, dumbbells, clubs, hand
    rings . Social games and dance routines were
    also emphasized in the system.
  • Progressive schools were quick to accept the
    lighter approach to gymnastics.
  • Founded Boston Normal Institute for PE-prepared
    teachers for teaching light gymnastics.

22
The Hitchcock System
  • Hitchcock system involved a battery of tests for
    the establishment of a baseline from which
    comparisons could be made over time to establish
    progress.
  • First truly American system using horizontal and
    rack bars, ladders, weights, rings, Indian clubs
    ropes, etc.
  • Established criterion for ANTHROPOMETRIC
    MEASUREMENT.

23
The Sargent System
  • Amalgamation of most of the systems mentioned.
  • All students of this system underwent
    comprehensive medical and anthropometrical
    testing. Prescription for activity was made
    based on this info.
  • He developed specialized exercise machines
    through which the prescriptions could be made.

24
The Sargent System
  • Dudley Sargent was destined to become one of the
    most influential leaders in the development of
    American PE.

25
Summary
  • The Boston Conference 1889.
  • Pivotal in the development of American PE.
  • Examined and evaluated current activities in PE.
  • Added legitimacy to the beginnings of American
    PE.
  • Sport was not a major topic. Not a part of the
    PE scene at this time.

26
Emergence of Organized SPORT
  • The late 19th Century was a remarkable period for
    the development of standardized sport.
  • Archery, baseball, football, golf, ice hockey,
    soccer, swimming, tennis to name a few became
    standardized.
  • Baseball was probably our first truly national
    sport.

27
Emergence of Organized Sport
  • 1868-Cincinnati Red Stockings hired a manager who
    put together the most complete team of
    professionals he could hire. Undefeated for over
    a year. Played to over 200,000 people.
  • Softball was invented in Chicago in 1887.
  • Basketball in Massachusetts by James Naismith in
    1891.
  • Volleyball in Massachusetts by William Morgan in
    1896.

28
Emergence of Organized Sport
  • Women were involved in the sport movement from
    the beginning. (basketball/volleyball)
  • Revival of the Olympic Games in Athens in 1896.
    An educational program of peace and cultural
    understanding that sought to unite the modern
    world.

29
Emergence of Organized Sport
  • In 1850 there was very little sport participation
    of any kind on American college campuses.
  • By the turn of the century, sport had assumed a
    critical social function on most campuses.
  • 1852 FIRST COLLEGIATE COMPETITION-crew race btw
    Harvard and Yale.

30
The New Physical Education
  • In America, the idea of Universal Public
    Education had taken hold by the end of the 19th
    Century.
  • With increasing immigration, child labor laws,
    and school attendance laws the idea had taken
    further hold.
  • Developmental Theorists viewed childhood as a
    separate developmental stage. Their ideals
    greatly influenced American education.

31
The New Physical Education
  • This movement in education greatly influenced PE.
  • Created a philosophy within which sport, fitness,
    and PE were fundamentally interrelated.
  • 1891-NEA recognizes PE as a curricular field.
    End of gymnastics oriented PE.

32
The Spreading of the PE Umbrella
  • In the years btw the turn of the century and WW1,
    the character of American PE took shape.
  • It embraced a number of growing movements
    dance, YW/YMCA, playgrounds, recreation, outdoor
    education, sport, fitness, health education and
    intramurals.

33
The Golden Age Post WW1
  • The era btw WW1 and the early 30s was an active
    period for the sport, fitness and PE professions.
  • A middle class was emerging, people had money and
    wanted diversion.
  • National interest in sport grew.
  • Bobby Jones/golf, Babe Ruth and Lou
    Gehrig/baseball, Jack Dempsey/boxing

34
The Golden Age Post WW1
  • PE required in schools.
  • Teacher education in PE became available in more
    colleges and universities. Graduate study in PE
    began to develop.
  • The notion of EDUCATION through the PHYSICAL
    became the modern interpretation of PE.

35
The Golden Age Post WW1
  • Access and equality for women and blacks were no
    features of this era, even though pioneering work
    was accomplished by women leaders.
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