2015
DOI: 10.1080/13573322.2014.987745
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Communicating aims and learning goals in physical education: part of a subject for learning?

Abstract: Based on a socio-cultural perspective on learning, the aim of this article is to examine how aims and learning goals are communicated in physical education (PE) practice. A special focus is on scrutinising how teaching practices are framed in terms of whether and how the aims and learning goals are made explicit or not to students. The aim is also to relate these kinds of communications to different movement cultures. The result shows that many of the students taking part in the study do not understand what th… Show more

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Cited by 70 publications
(71 citation statements)
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References 26 publications
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“…Unlike many other lessons, and unlike the overall result of the national evaluation of Swedish PE (Quennerstedt et al, 2008), these lessons include discussion and negotiation, partly because the music is used for a more specific purpose.…”
Section: The Pe Lesson Looks-like-dancingmentioning
confidence: 94%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Unlike many other lessons, and unlike the overall result of the national evaluation of Swedish PE (Quennerstedt et al, 2008), these lessons include discussion and negotiation, partly because the music is used for a more specific purpose.…”
Section: The Pe Lesson Looks-like-dancingmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…The knowledge requirements for the part of PE in which students, for example, are expected to display how they 'with good quality of movement (can) perform a range of activities that improve physical ability' (SNAE, 2011b, p. 3) seem to some extent to be obscure to PE teachers. According to evaluations and inspections of the subject, a focus on knowledge and learning is difficult for teachers to implement pedagogically, especially in relation to a traditional content in the form of sports, keep-fit and outdoor activities (Quennerstedt, Öhman, & Eriksson, 2008;SSI, 2010SSI, , 2012. In fact, already in 1991 Annerstedt claimed PE to be in a 'phase of uncertainty' regarding the educational contribution of the subject.…”
Section: Pe-a Subject Undergoing Changementioning
confidence: 99%
“…What makes the TLC program unique amongst many alternative schooling programs is its partnership with a local Australian (National) rugby league or NRL club whereby players are actively engaged in classroom pedagogy. This paper seeks to understand what is it the teachers and players 'do' when they teach in the TLC and 'how' they do it, and also what and how the learners' 'learn', what is actually taking place, which is often overlooked in research into learning in PE (Redelius, Quennerstedt, & Öhman, 2015;Quennerstedt, Öhman, & Armour, 2014). The discussion is framed by Bernstein's (1990) understanding of the social reproduction of pedagogic discourse, whereby teaching and learning is conceptualised as a 'pedagogic relay', constituted by continuous and inter-related teacher and learner decisions and actions.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Then, as Redelius et al (2015) remind us, comes the matter of accounting for such learning in education systems that increasingly demand evidence of that learning. While the papers in this collection attempt (successfully I might add) to account for learning in PE via their theorizing and empirical studies, there is a danger that making explicit links between the stated outcomes of a curriculum and assessment of learning can inadvertently take us on the slippery slope of implicitly accepting a sort of linear relationship between outcomes and expectations (the articulation of purposes).…”
Section: Commentary On Research Into Learning In Physical Education 677mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We are told by Redelius et al (2015) that the Swedish school system is driven by goals. However, we learn that teachers of PE are uncertain about the goals of their subject and in Sweden there is a "striking lack of clarity over the purpose of the subject, particularly in terms of its educational purpose" (p. 12).…”
Section: Commentary On Research Into Learning In Physical Education 677mentioning
confidence: 99%