4.3 Article

Chapter 3: PK-12 School Physical Education: Conditions, Lessons Learned, and Future Directions

Journal

JOURNAL OF TEACHING IN PHYSICAL EDUCATION
Volume 40, Issue 3, Pages 363-371

Publisher

HUMAN KINETICS PUBL INC
DOI: 10.1123/jtpe.2020-0241

Keywords

health education; school programs; teaching

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Challenges faced by physical education teachers stem from external factors such as school designs, threats to well-being, and financial issues, as well as internal issues like marginalization, isolation, and morale problems. Proposed solutions include integrating physical education and health, shifting focus on instruction, and strengthening connections with the community.
Manifest challenges to physical education teachers merit identification, analysis, and strategic action. New designs for schools, threats to the well-being of a growing number of children and families, and financial problems confronting school systems are among the external challenges. Meanwhile, too many physical education teachers confront marginalization, isolation, and morale issues. Contributing causes include suboptimal policy; disagreements regarding subject matter, curriculum models, and purposes; working conditions that prevent teachers from implementing evidence-based practices; and two disconnects: (a) between physical education and health and (b) between school programs and community-based programs. Reflecting and fueling these challenges, the field lacks a common purpose and shared direction. This chapter addresses future alternatives for PK-12 physical education. Key recommendations include (a) integrating physical education and health, treating them both instructionally and as integrated content in the curriculum; (b) changing our focus on our instruction from a deficiency-based model to a salutogenic model of health, including stronger connections with the community in which schools exist; and (c) connecting to the community to leverage resources to support students, teachers, and schools. These alternatives derive from a grand claim: we cannot continue to do business as usual, producing the same results, because past-present results consistently have been suboptimal.

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