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Macdonald, Doune – Education in Rural Australia, 1994
Beginning health and physical education (HPE) teachers in rural and urban secondary schools in Australia shared concerns surrounding the status of HPE, HPE teachers' responsibilities, the routine nature of HPE teaching, sexual harassment, and public scrutiny of HPE teachers' lives. Suggests that teacher education programs address the problematic…
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Physical Education
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Martino, Wayne; Beckett, Lori – Sport, Education and Society, 2004
This paper investigates how two male teachers construct health and physical education (HPE) as a particular site for schooling the gendered body. Using knowledge of productive pedagogies and a theoretical framework that draws on the work of Foucauldian analytic categories, we foreground how issues of identity, the body and gendered knowledge/power…
Descriptors: Physical Education, Teaching Methods, Health Education, Teacher Attitudes
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Wright, Jan; Forrest, Greg – Physical Education and Sport Pedagogy, 2007
Background: Games centred approaches (GCA) such as TGfU, Game Sense, and Tactical Games are widely promoted as alternatives to traditional forms of teaching games within physical education. These approaches are promoted on the basis of their capacity to engage students in meaningful and enjoyable physical activity and to promote problem-solving…
Descriptors: Physical Education, Physical Activities, Learning Strategies, Sexual Identity
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Light, Richard; Tan, Steven – European Physical Education Review, 2006
Despite the diversity of cultural settings within which it is now being implemented, research on Teaching Games for Understanding (TGfU) is yet to address the impact of culture on teaching and learning. With its growth in Asia, in places such as Singapore and Hong Kong that are culturally distinct from western settings, this seems to be an area of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Cultural Differences, Cultural Context, Preservice Teacher Education
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Macdonald, Doune – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 1995
The purpose of this study was to discover the dissatisfactions for Australian beginning physical education (PE) teachers. Qualitative data yielded five main categories underpinning teacher dissatisfaction: lack of status, repetitive nature of PE work, limited decision making, personal and professional surveillance, and unprofessional staff-room…
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Career Change, Faculty Mobility, Foreign Countries
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Hastie, Peter A.; Saunders, John E. – Journal of Experimental Education, 1991
The effects of class size and availability of physical education equipment on students' and teachers' classroom behaviors were studied. The academic learning time-physical education instrument was used in primary-school physical-education classes in Queensland (Australia) containing 12, 24, and 44 5- and 6-year olds. These variables affected…
Descriptors: Class Size, Classroom Techniques, Elementary School Students, Equipment
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Gard, Michael – Education in Rural Australia, 2001
By wedding itself to the "ideology of sport" and associated notions of "manliness," physical education in Australia has retained little scope to advocate for cultural diversity. By maintaining that sport is universally popular amongst all children, physical education silences other ways in which children might find pleasure…
Descriptors: Athletics, Competition, Cultural Images, Cultural Pluralism
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Macdonald, Doune; Tinning, Richard – Journal of Teaching in Physical Education, 1995
Describes one Australian physical education (PE) teacher education (PETE) program, arguing that PE teacher preparation implicates PETE in the trend to proletarianize teachers' work while national claims for increased professionalism are heard. The PETE program represented teaching as technical and unproblematic, with faculty and students accorded…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Elementary Secondary Education, Equal Education, Foreign Countries
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Light, Richard – Physical Education and Sport Pedagogy, 2004
This paper draws on a series of interviews conducted in 2002 with practising Australian coaches working with an Australian variant of TGfU, Game Sense. It examines their experiences of Game Sense in a range of sports played from introductory, grassroots levels to sport played at the most elite levels. The views of the coaches in the study lend…
Descriptors: Physical Education, Teaching Methods, Foreign Countries, Team Sports
Hammond, John; Gilbert, Keith – 1994
Developments in the New South Wales (Australia) secondary school curriculum have led to a number of former home economics teachers being allocated to teach in the area of Personal Development, Health and Physical Education (PDHPE). The New South Wales Department of School Education in conjunction with the University of New England (New South…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Distance Education, Foreign Countries, Graduate Study
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Thorburn, Malcolm; Collins, Dave – European Physical Education Review, 2006
In an earlier article, we considered the pedagogy and assessment practices enacted by physical education (PE) teachers when attempting to translate a centrally prescribed rationale into meaningful performance-led teaching within an integrated curriculum--Higher Still Physical Education (HSPE) in Scotland. Through further research this article…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Integrated Curriculum, Physical Education, Teacher Effectiveness
Mawer, Mick, Ed. – 1996
These chapters describe partnerships and mentoring programs in the United Kingdom for initial teacher education. Part 1: The Context contains two chapters: "Partnerships in School-Based Training: The Implications for Physical Education" (Patricia Shenton and Elizabeth Murdoch); and "What Is Mentoring?" (Michael Taylor and Joan…
Descriptors: Beginning Teacher Induction, College School Cooperation, Elementary Secondary Education, Foreign Countries
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Penney, Dawn; Jess, Mike – Sport, Education and Society, 2004
This paper focuses upon the relationship between physical education and interests in enabling more people to establish and maintain "active and healthy lives" from a curriculum development perspective. Twin and inter-linked concepts of "lifelong learning" and "lifelong physical activity" are presented as a conceptual…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Physical Education, Physical Activities, Lifelong Learning
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Macdonald, Doune – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2003
In this paper, the author contends that curricularists should look in other directions rather than continue to be occupied with increasingly anachronistic reform projects. With this argument in mind, in the first section of this paper the author examines curriculum-reform strategies and theories, drawing specific examples from physical education…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Young Adults, Physical Education, Curriculum Development
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Ward, Phillip; Ko, Bomna – Journal of Teaching in Physical Education, 2006
We examined publication trends in the "Journal of Teaching in Physical Education (JTPE)" in terms of total representation as well as trends by decade of the (a) sex and country of affiliation of editors, (b) sex and country of affiliation of editorial board members, (c) sex and country of affiliation of first authors, (d) types of…
Descriptors: Publications, Trend Analysis, Physical Education, Sex
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