2001
DOI: 10.1080/17508480109556385
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The Thinking Body: Constructivist Approaches to Games Teaching in Physical Education

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Cited by 27 publications
(13 citation statements)
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References 14 publications
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“…Through a tactical approach as a whole, students can learn to put themselves in all positions and develop the proper playing skills in their team in accordance with the rules of the game itself. (6) Activities in the form of tactical approaches can be used as a strategy in learning or training to be planned as a strategy for future game activities [13].…”
Section: B Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Through a tactical approach as a whole, students can learn to put themselves in all positions and develop the proper playing skills in their team in accordance with the rules of the game itself. (6) Activities in the form of tactical approaches can be used as a strategy in learning or training to be planned as a strategy for future game activities [13].…”
Section: B Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As researchers in the field have noted (for example, Kirk &Macdonald, 1999;Kirk & McPhail, 2002;Light & Fawns, 2001Whitehead, 1990) games offer a potential medium for the integration of physical, social and intellectual learning par excellence. Games and sport inherently involve moving and thinking in ways that are inseparable, require a range of higher order thinking, perception, and bodily and verbal communication.…”
Section: Learning Through Gamesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Games inherently involve the body in complex cognitive processes where cognition and movement, the mind and the body cannot be separated (Light & Fawns, 2003). Games play involves the 'thinking body' (Light and Fawns, 2001) in a way that challenges dualistic conceptions of the mind as separate from and elevated above the body. By focusing on the tactical dimensions of games and stressing the integrated nature skill execution with cognition and environment, Game Sense offers a means of integrating cognitive, physical and affective learning Light & Fawns, 2003;Pope, 2003).…”
Section: Learning Through Gamesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Physical education offers clear opportunities to bring these key competencies to the fore, and successful engagement in movement contexts requires these key competencies of students. With respect to thinking, physical education is rich in terms of both opportunities and a need for problem solving, decision-making and creative thinking (Grehaigné, Godbout, & Bouthier, 2001;Light & Fawns, 2001). As Burrows (2005) has stressed, there is need for managing self to be conceived in a way that foregrounds the connectedness Teachers and Curriculum, Volume 13, 2013…”
Section: Table Of Contents Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%