2015
DOI: 10.1080/13573322.2014.975114
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Knowing in primary physical education in the UK: negotiating movement culture

Abstract: This paper aims to understand how pupils and teachers actions-in-context constitute being-a-pupil and being-a-teacher within a primary school physical education (PE) movement culture. Dewey and Bentley's theory of transaction, which views organism-in-environment-as-a-whole, enables the researcher to explore how actions-in-ongoing activities constitute and negotiate PE movement culture. Video footage from seven primary school PE lessons from a school in the West Midlands in the UK was analysed by focusing upon … Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
1
1
1

Citation Types

0
14
0

Year Published

2015
2015
2019
2019

Publication Types

Select...
7

Relationship

2
5

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 19 publications
(14 citation statements)
references
References 32 publications
0
14
0
Order By: Relevance
“…The students were practicing the shot with a substitute golf ball on the edge of a soccer field without a target. In line with other research in this special issue (Ward & Quennerstedt, 2015), the movement culture being approximated was techniqueoriented. This may explain why the hitter in the second sequence punched her fist in the air after her shot rolled slowly over the grass.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 53%
“…The students were practicing the shot with a substitute golf ball on the edge of a soccer field without a target. In line with other research in this special issue (Ward & Quennerstedt, 2015), the movement culture being approximated was techniqueoriented. This may explain why the hitter in the second sequence punched her fist in the air after her shot rolled slowly over the grass.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 53%
“…Ultimately, the expert panel reached the consensus that using wording based on selected, quite Westernized (cf. Evans, 2014;Ward & Quennerstedt, 2015;Williams, 2018), concepts from this wide range of developmental domainsmotivation, confidence, competence and knowledge-may be misleading, and potentially inappropriate, not least when considering aspects of Australia's Indigenous and immigrant cultures. Likewise, the live debates in workshops gradually grew to recognize that while there are already thriving literatures in motor control, physical activity, motivation, and confidence, physical literacy needed to be defined as more than simply the sum of those parts.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ligozat (2011) reported that JASD is a pragmatist and social-interactionist approach to classroom practices, which has links with the theoretical works of Mead, Blumer, and Goffman as well as the one of Vygotsky. It has also commonalities with the 'Swedish didactics research tradition' of studying PE practices within a pragmatist and transactional theory of experience (Quennerstedt, 2013;Quennerstedt, Öhman, & Öhman, 2011; see also Ward & Quennerstedt, 2015) as well as in considering that students' learning emerges through social interactions including how the body is implicated in interactional situations (Larsson, Fagrell, & Redelius, 2009; see also Barker, Quennerstedt, & Annerstedt, 2015). From a theoretical standpoint, teacher and students 'joint action' stands for the situated interdependence of classroom actions on the one hand and the cultural, institutional and historical contexts in which the joint action occurs on the Physical education in Tunisia 659 other.…”
Section: Outlines Of the Tunisian National Pe Curriculummentioning
confidence: 99%