Title: Physical Education
1Physical Education Health Education - New
Agendas 80014 / EDU 1461
2 THE TEACHERS OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION
- Week Two -
- The Role of the teacher within the
- Health and Physical Education
- Syllabus.
3WHAT IS PHYSICAL EDUCATION
- Physical Education is that part of a childs
education which uses physical activity as the
medium for education. - It is concerned with the development of
attitudes, knowledge and skills related to
health, fitness and recreation.
4A LONG LONG TIME AGO IN A GALAXY FAR FAR AWAY
- From the earliest beginnings after the Education
Act of 1875, generalist teachers have been
providing Physical Education programs for their
students. - These programs have been shaped by the ever
changing discourse that is health and Physical
Education. - Programs based upon Swedish gymnastics, military
drill, medical examinations and colonial sports
have all been offered under the communal title of
PHYSICAL EDUCATION
5A LONG LONG TIME AGO IN A GALAXY FAR FAR AWAY
- Support was offered to the generalist teacher
through resources such as syllabus documents in
games, folk dancing, cricket and swimming. - From the end of WW 2 until the early 1970s
Physical Education was dominated by the remnants
of military training. All movements were done
with military precision, punishment was rampant
for those who did not, or could not, perform the
allocated tasks. - Physical Education became a prime site for
schooling bodies to be constrained yet useful. It
offered purpose and structure to the youth of the
day.
6THE MOVE TO REALPHYSCAL EDUCATION
- 1972 - New syllabus in Physical Education. It
differed from all previous documents as it placed
health education as a primary objective. - Unlike the earlier syllabus documents that
supplied teachers with How to lesson plans,
this syllabus did not. Generalist teachers now
had to plan Physical Education lessons for
themselves either on a class, year level or
school basis. - In tandem with this new document was the move by
Education Queensland to place specialist teachers
of Physical Education into primary school
environments.
7THE MOVE TO REALPHYSCAL EDUCATION
- The role of the specialist teacher was to
instruct and demonstrate Physical Education
concepts to generalist teachers. It was not to
teach students. - In reality, the small number of these specialist
teachers and the geographical constraints of
getting to Queensland primary schools meant that
in reality they were rarely seen. - When they did appear it was a quick fix scenario.
The latest equipment, techniques and methods that
would have benefited teachers was often not
forthcoming. It became a Do this until I see
you culture.
8THE MOVE TO REALPHYSCAL EDUCATION
- In the late 1970s more teachers were appointed
as Physical Education specialists , and their
role evolved to actually include instruction of
students. (Interesting that this did not appear
on the role description until some 15 years
later) - With the specialist instructing the class, the
generalist teacher was required to attend the
lesson, take notes and follow up the activity
with their class at a later stage. - Assessment was a shared responsibility between
the specialist and generalist teachers, but it
was the generalist teacher who maintained full
responsibility for the program.
9SO WHAT REALLY HAPPENED?
- If you were pro-active towards physical Education
you did the following - Attended the Lessons
- Took Notes of the Selected Activities
- Participated when required
- Asked for additional resources
- Followed up activities on a regular basis
- Worked to ensure your students had access to
quality Physical Education experiences - If you were inactive towards Physical Education
you more than likely did the reverse of these
listed above.
10THE MOVE TO NON-CONTACT TIME
- Generalist teachers freed from attending Physical
Education and Music specialist lessons. Some
still choose to attend but most used to the time
for marking etc. - The result was that follow-up lessons became a
figment of Education Queenslands imagination.
They were regularly timetabled but in most
schools this timetabling was rarely checked, and
on even less occasions enforced by
administrators. - Physical Education was reduced to Aussie Sport
or Daily P.E on a irregular basis, with a
rationale based upon children blowing away the
cobwebs.
11WHAT WILL YOUR ROLE LOOK LIKE?
- If you have a specialist PE teacher appointed to
your school, you will generally be required to - Teach lessons in health and personal development.
- Assist with swimming instruction and act as an
official at school carnivals etc. - Additionally you may be involved in the coaching
of a sporting team or the co-ordination of
sports-based experiences at your school. - If you do not have access to a specialist teacher
then you are responsible for the planning and the
implementation of physical activity for you
students.
12WHAT WILL YOUR ROLE LOOK LIKE?
- Integrated curriculum means that all classroom
activities should be able to be integrated to
produce rich learning experiences. - Health and Physical Education is linked to
activities from the other seven key learning
areas (KLAs) to assist in the attainment of
health and Physical Education outcomes. - Global planning needed.
- Knowledge of the syllabus document needed.
13THE HEALTH AND PHYSICAL EDUCATION 1-10 SYLLABUS
- Framework drafted from the national profile.
- Growth and development
- Fundamental movement patterns and coordinated
movements of the body - Fitness
- Physical activity
- Effective relationships
- Identity
- Safety
- Challenge and risk
- The Role of food and nutrition
- The multi-dimensional nature of health.
14THE HEALTH AND PHYSICAL EDUCATION 1-10 SYLLABUS
- The syllabus document is broken into three
sections or strands (preferred name). - 1. Promoting the Health of Individuals and
Communities - 2. Developing concepts and Skills for Physical
Activity - 3. Enhancing Personal Development.
15STRAND 1 PROMTING THE HEALTH OF INDIVIDUALS AND
COMMUNITIES
- States of health, which include factors
influencing health and health promoting
behaviours. - Challenge, risk, and safety.
- Nutrition.
- Health Resources.
- Social and physical environments.
16STRAND 2 DEVELOPING CONCEPTS AND SKILLS FOR
PHYSICAL ACTIVITY
- Movement skills, including fundamental movement
skills, and specialised skills for movement. - Movement concepts, including the components of
movement, principles of movement, skill
acquisition, and exercise physiology - Safety.
- Strategic awareness.
- Health-related fitness, including the
relationship between health, physical activity
and fitness. - Sociocultural perspectives, including factors
that influence attitudes towards, and
participation in, physical activities.
17STRAND 3 ENHANCING PERSONAL DEVELOPMENT
- Identity and relationships, including aspects of
identity relationships in families, friendships
and groups, and factors that influence identity
and relationships. - Cooperation and communication
- Growth and development.
18THE SYLLABUS LEVELS
- The syllabus has identified a series of
benchmarks that have been listed as level
statements. These are the broad expectations of
what should be demonstrated at a particular
level, and at in a chronological timeframe. - Foundation Level - pre school/early year 1.
- Level 1- year 1
- Level 2- year 3
- Level 3 - year 5
- Level 4 - year 7
- Levels 5 and 6 are appropriate in high school
settings, or for advanced primary school
students.
19SO WHAT?
- Both generalist classroom teachers and specialist
PE teachers need to make themselves aware of the
working capabilities of this document. - Upon graduation this syllabus will have undergone
full implementation in Qld State schools, and a
large number of independent schools.
20FOR NEXT WEEK
- Begin to talk about the planning process in
Health and Physical Education. - Read through curriculum development
framework - conceptual framework
- suggested planning process
- For those of you not signed up in tutorial groups
today is your last opportunity!