Happy
Holidays from pelinks4u
pelinks4u
staff, editors, and contributors wish you
health and happiness this holiday season.
This month we feature SEVEN new articles including
suggestions for holiday inspired physical
activities and ways to help you preserve your
regular physical activity habits. Be sure
too to check out the review of a new book
Change
Your Body, Change the World by Exuberant
Animal creator, Frank Forencich.
Finally, I'm happy
to report that we now have more than 600 visionary
statements about physical education posted
at the PE2020
web site. If you haven't yet contributed,
help create a road map into the future by
collaborating in the drafting of a visionary
blueprint. And if you can, join us at the
PE2020 Forum at the AAHPERD
Convention in San Diego, March 29th.
 From
the Publisher…
Why
Builders Don't Design Houses and Physical
Educators Should Not Create Lesson
Plans
A friend of mine,
named Dave, is a custom homebuilder. He buys
house plans, or customers bring him architect-designed
blueprints. These plans get him started and
guide him through the project. Frequently
he has to make modifications. Problems arise
during construction that the architect did
not anticipate. Locations and materials often
create specific construction challenges. As
an experienced builder Dave has become skilled
at adapting house plans. Sometimes it's frustrating,
but Dave has no desire to go into home design.
He understands it requires a skill set he
neither possesses nor wants to learn.
Dave's employees
work closely alongside him. Few of them bring
much prior experience. He mostly looks for
a good work ethic and a desire to learn. He
starts them out with straightforward tasks
he's confident they can do without messing
up. Gradually he has them do more, giving
careful instruction along the way. He knows
that if they make mistakes it will not only
cost him time and money but also affect his
reputation and the quality of the homes he
builds. Over time, his employees become skilled
enough to do more, and progressively become
competent builders.
This story leads
me to puzzle why we expect physical education
teachers - and especially novices - to create
lesson plans. Most physical educators neither
have the skills nor motivation. People who
choose to teach physical education do so for
good reasons. It's not that they are incapable
of writing or planning, but for most that's
not their first love. Physical educators like
to be around kids. They like to move and share
their love of physical activity. Many want
to coach. They are typically excellent communicators
and motivators. And they neither like nor
are any good at lesson planning.
Arne
Duncan, Education Secretary, suggested
some time ago that teacher preparation required
revolution rather than revision. This month,
a Blue
Ribbon Panel to improve student learning
echoed this thought. It urged teacher-training
programs to operate more like medical schools
that rely heavily on clinical experience.
For nurses and doctors
the day following graduation is no different
than the days and months before. Their entire
professional preparation is spent splitting
hours between the hospital and classroom.
During training they don't create procedures
and practices, but follow instructions. Similar
to the military, they are drilled in professional
practice. They learn on the shoulders of those
experienced to know what works. They are neither
encouraged nor permitted to experiment with
practices that risk negative consequences
for others. The result is a consistency in
behaviors that meet expected performance standards.
Contrast this with
physical education teacher preparation. We
take students unskilled in and not knowledgeable
about the topic they are expected to teach,
lacking instructional skills, novices at classroom
management, and unmotivated writers. With
all of these deficiencies we then devote countless
hours to having them try to create quality
lesson plans. Little surprise that both the
plans and the teacher performance turns out
disappointing.
After two years of
minimal public school experience these novice
teachers are assigned to student teaching,
and not only expected to manage large groups
of children but also to create detailed lesson
plans. More often than not the result is another
huge disappointment. Hardly surprising is
the transition of these college graduates
into the ranks of physical educators lacking
effective instructional skills, and who will
never create nor teach quality lesson plans.
What we currently
do just doesn't make sense, and yet we continue
doing it this way. Instead, why not simply
put a well-designed lesson plan into the hands
of novice teachers from the outset? Abandon
the pursuit of good writers and let's focus
on developing quality teachers. Forget the
idea that new teachers will take time to create
effective lesson plans. They simply don't
have time even if they were motivated. Better
to give them one of the key tools for success
right from the outset.
Why don't we already
do this? It's tempting to blame teacher educators.
You know, those people-who-can't-teach-but-teach-teacher
individuals. But I don't buy that idea for
at least two reasons. Successful coaches rarely
can perform the skills they expect from their
athletes. Similarly, teaching people how to
teach is not the same as teaching children.
But more importantly national and state regulating
agencies, school districts, and higher education
institutions handicap what teacher educator
can and can't do.
So, here's an idea
for educational reformers: Adopt an evidence-based
approach to teacher preparation. Develop criteria
for what constitutes an effective teacher.
Get rid of the handicapping regulations. Let
faculty design and adapt programs in a way
that they are confident will allow them to
graduate high performing teachers, and also
eliminate those individuals who should never
become teachers. Given full control of their
destiny, it would be fine to hold programs
and faculty accountable for outcomes that
they said they could achieve.
In this brave, new
world, imagine the changes we'd see in teacher
preparation and more importantly in the quality
of teaching and student learning. Almost certainly,
we'd quit wasting time having novice teachers
try to create quality lesson plans.
Steve
Jefferies, publisher
pelinks4u
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