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From
the Publisher…
Reflections
on the Past, Visions of our Professional Future
As many of you know, this year celebrates
the 125th anniversary of the American Alliance
for Health, Physical Education, Recreation,
and Dance (AAHPERD). At the recent Indianapolis
national convention the national associations
that form AAHPERD were invited to reflect
on what’s happened in the 25 years since
our centenary, and to predict our professional
future. As the outgoing NASPE President I
had the pleasure of sharing my personal thoughts.
You can find them in this month’s issue.
But my real pleasure this month is sharing
a special treat for pelinks4u readers
- an online presentation by Dr. Mike Metzler
who teaches at Georgia State University. Mike,
as many of you know, has contributed extensively
to the past 25 years of physical education’s
history. In October, at the Physical Education
Teacher Education conference in Myrtle Beach,
Mike gave a presentation entitled, “That
was Then…This is Now: Celebrating PETE’s
Past While Facing the Challenges in its Future.”
In it, Mike highlighted significant events
that have changed the way we teach physical
education. He helped us understand why we
do what we do today. And he noted issues that
he felt needed to be resolved for us to move
forward and enjoy a successful future.
Dr. Metzler graciously agreed to recreate
his conference presentation specifically for
pelinks4u readers, and using the
latest technology you can read,
or watch and listen
to the presentation this month. Whether you
prepare future teachers, or teach in the K-12
system, don’t miss this insightful presentation.
It’s vital for all of us to learn from
our past as we try to make informed decisions
affecting our future. Mike’s presentation
provides a great background to get you thinking
about our next steps. Also contributing to
this presentation was Dr. Lynn Housner from
West Virginia University and another longtime,
highly respected contributor to physical education
teacher preparation. pelinks4u thanks
both of them.
And finally, on the same theme of futuristic
thinking, NASPE just announced an exciting
new initiative called PE2020. It’s an
invitation to you, your students, and everyone
you know inside and outside of our profession,
to imagine how they would like physical education
to look in the year 2020 and beyond. pelinks4u
is excited to support this initiative because
clearly the contradictory implications of
a declining economy and worsening student
health affect our profession. This is an opportunity,
not a catastrophe. But we must act to determine
our own professional future and not simply
be shaped by the actions of others. PE2020
seeks your input to help plan our future.
Visit the web site www.pe2020.org
for more information, or click on the PE2020
logo on our web site. |
Steve
Jefferies, Publisher
pelinks4u |
Build
a Shared Vision for Physical Education in
the Year 2020 and Beyond |
That
was Then…This is Now:
Celebrating PETE’s Past
While Facing The Challenges In Its Future
by
Mike Metzler, Georgia State University &
Lynn
Housner, West Virginia University
PLEASE
FEEL FREE TO VIEW THE ACCOMPANYING POWERPOINT
SLIDES WITH THE FOLLOWING ARTICLE, OR
JUST LISTEN!
Hello. My name is Mike Metzler, and I am
a PETE professor at Georgia State University.
The co-author of this paper is Lynn Housner,
also a PETE professor, from West Virginia
University. Lynn and I were asked to do the
summary session at the 2009 NASPE PETE conference
in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina.
Our paper was entitled, [slide
1] That was Then…This is Now:
Celebrating PETE’s Past While Facing
The Challenges In Its Future, and we
are very are pleased that pelinks4u
is allowing us to present our combined paper
and slides to you. Due to a previous commitment,
Dr. Housner was not able to be present in
Myrtle Beach. However Lynn made a major contribution
to what we said at the NASPE PETE conference,
and deserves a full portion of credit for
what you might find agreeable, as well as
all
of the blame for anything that rubs you the
wrong way. Since he could not be there in
person, I told Lynn that I’d give him
up in a heartbeat, and there you have it.
We are going to start by highlighting some
of the many notable achievements by the PETE
professoriate over the last 40 years. Along
the way, I’ll ask you to identify some
of the most significant events in PETE history
since 1970 - adding to our own list of major
events and development in each decade. And,
because we just can’t leave well enough
alone, we’ll go from touting PETE’s
successes to discussing some of the challenges
facing our collective future - things that
will require taking a long hard look at who
we are and what we do, even suggesting that
we re-examine some of our core values as a
community of researchers, scholars and teacher
educators.
[slide 2]
The year is 1971. The event is the publication
of the themed January issue of Quest, “Educational
change in the teaching of physical education.”
[slide 3]
In that issue, Shirl Hoffman carries on a
self debate over the question of “Which
is better? - the traditional “PE method”
or some of the more innovative, theory-based
methods that had been introduced in the previous
several years.”
[slide 4] He was referring, mostly,
of course, to Mosston’s Spectrum of
Teaching Styles, and also to the pedagogy
used for movement education and other inquiry-based
instruction.
In the end, Hoffman admits that he couldn’t
really answer his own question, because there
existed no empirical knowledge base from which
to do so. He lamented,
[slide 5] “The writer confesses
that he does not know what behaviors constitute
good teaching and welcomes enlightenment.
Regardless of the real or imagined merits
of any method, new alternatives for teaching
are always worthy of at least systematic and
patient exploration.” (p. 56). Other
articles in that same monograph, by Kate Barrett,
Bill Anderson, Sylvia Fishman and Anderson,
and Neil Dougherty presented similar assessments
of the state of research on teaching physical
education: lots of questions, lots of gaps
in our knowledge base, and lots of frustration
- but beneath all that, lots of hope.
[slide 6]
Some of that hope was actually in the process
of being fulfilled as those articles were
published in 1971. In another Quest monograph,
published in 1977 Larry Locke declared that
there was indeed, “New hope for the
dismal science of research on teaching physical
education.” Much of that hope came from
his review of research on teaching that had
been completed from 1970 to 1972. From that,
he surmised [slide
7]:
“By stretching things a little we
have accumulated no more than 50 studies,
but the movement is underway and gaining
momentum. If we have any dream of a physical
education in which the instructional process
is informed by knowledge born of disciplined
inquiry, then the new forms of research
on teaching are our foothold on the future.”
(p. 11).
That same 1977 monograph included three other
articles on research on teaching physical education
that held the promise for a bright future. In
my mind, the most notable of them was Hoffman’s
classic essay, “Toward a pedagogical kinesiology”
which gave us a vision for what the pedagogical
content knowledge for teaching physical education
might look like - long before we standardized
Lee Shulman’s term of Pedagogical Content
Knowledge. I will come back to Hoffman’s
vision later.
The 50 or so studies completed between 1970
and Locke’s 1977 article represented
nothing less than the initial row of building
blocks for an empirical foundation for teaching
and teacher education called for by Hoffman,
Barrett, and others. From that modest foundation,
we began to build a respected field of study
with four main components: 1) research on
teaching and learning, 2) research on teachers,
3) research on teacher education, and 4) teacher
education programming. The PETE professoriate
can claim an impressive, if not long, history
of significant events and developments that
have served to move us forward in the four
main areas just mentioned. What I would like
to do now is touch on a sampling of what we
consider to be the most important of those
events and developments over the last four
decades.
PLEASE
CONTINUE TO THE NEXT
PAGE
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(click titles below to access
articles)
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COACHING
THE-WHOLE-ATHLETE
A theme that we’ve addressed
several times over the years in pelinks4u
is the extent to which we are meeting
the purpose that sports should serve
for student athletes. This month in
COACHING THE-WHOLE-ATHLETE,
Deborah
Cadorette suggests that rather
than simply focusing on the task at
hand, i.e. winning games, more valuable
outcomes are achievable when teachers
and coaches recognize that students
are not just “things”
to be manipulated. In addition to
giving example of ways we can treat
our athletes differently, Deborah
shares some wonderfully insightful
feedback from her students at Clemson
University. |
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PHYSICAL EDUCATION'S CONTRIBUTION
TO CHILDREN'S DAILY STEP COUNTS
Increasing children’s daily
physical activity is clearly one of
the keys to addressing obesity concerns.
For many students, physical education
class is the only time of the week
in which physical activity is actively
encouraged. But how much physical
activity do they really get? What
are the differences between elementary
and secondary PE classes in terms
of physical activity? In PHYSICAL
EDUCATION'S CONTRIBUTION TO CHILDREN'S
DAILY STEP COUNTS, Tim
Brusseau reviews studies that
have examined both the typical physical
activity that students get, and the
difference that PE classes seem to
make. The news looks pretty good.
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DRUG ABUSE: SO, WHAT CAN A PE TEACHER
DO ABOUT IT?
Author Isobel
Kleinman enjoyed the recent Winter
Olympics and was especially pleased
to see American skier Bode Miller
win a gold medal. Her elation was
quickly deflated when a friend pointed
out that Miller had publicly acknowledged
that at times he skied drunk, and
might do it again. Kleinman investigates
the challenges we face as teachers
in an article entitled, DRUG ABUSE:
SO, WHAT CAN A PE TEACHER DO ABOUT
IT? She suggests strategies PE
teachers can use to both recognize,
and then help, students who may have
issues with drugs. |
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DRUG USE A MAJOR PROBLEM FACING SPORTS:
YESTERDAY, TODAY, & TOMORROW
Kim
Nygaard continues the theme of
addressing drug abuse in DRUG
USE A MAJOR PROBLEM FACING SPORTS:
YESTERDAY, TODAY, & TOMORROW.
With so much pressure to win facing
many of our student-athletes, it’s
easy for young people to adopt self-abusing
behaviors. Nygaard points out the
relationship between the pressure
young people sometimes feel while
participating in sports, and the temptation
to use drugs. She also links an interesting
article on the ways in which parents
are often unknowingly responsible
for creating stressed-out children.
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ALL
ABOUT ASTHMA
In ALL ABOUT ASTHMA, Melissa
Rose informs us that asthma is
one of the most prevalent diseases
facing our students. Asthma usually
first appears with children and is
often induced by exercise. Fortunately,
it is treatable and students with
asthma can enjoy the same benefits
as other students in PE classes. In
this article, Melissa provides a nice
overview of the different types of
asthma, common medical treatments,
and how physical educators can prepare
themselves for teaching asthmatic
students in their classes. |
| REFLECTIONS
OF THE PAST, VISIONS FOR THE FUTURE
Finally, as noted earlier, in REFLECTIONS
OF THE PAST, VISIONS FOR THE FUTURE,
pelinks4u Publisher Steve
Jefferies shares notes from a
recent presentation he gave at this
year’s AAHPERD national convention.
He shares his personal perspective
on changes to the physical education
profession that have occurred over
the past 25 years. Steve then suggests
trends and issue that will likely
impact physical education in the next
quarter century. The paper concludes
with predictions of challenges and
opportunities for change in our profession.
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