Conventional Thought and Practice in Physical Education: Problems of Teaching and Implications for Change
- 1 August 1993
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Quest
- Vol. 45 (3) , 339-356
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00336297.1993.10484092
Abstract
Viewed in the light of benchmarks for professional quality, the generally weak commitment to teaching clearly becomes the main problem with current physical education. The ideological legacy of the profession—the two conventional ideas of “physical education as training of the physical” and “physical education as education through the physical”—is a main cause of confusion as well as the source for the growing lack of public support for physical education as an integral school subject. This paper looks at the theory of the self-reproducing failing of physical education as an hypothesis to explain this continuing plummet of physical education. Prospects for change are dependent on (a) creating conceptual clarity and cohesiveness among physical education teacher educators, (b) recruiting carefully, (c) maintaining “learning to reflect” as the leitmotiv of the teacher education program, and (d) developing an agreement of concepts among student teaching supervisors.Keywords
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