4.4 Article

Arriving in the body - students' experiences of yoga based practices (YBP) in physical education teacher education (PETE)

Journal

SPORT EDUCATION AND SOCIETY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/13573322.2022.2157385

Keywords

Yoga based practices; physical education teacher education; experience; phenomenology; regional lifeworld

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This study investigates the experiences of physical education teacher education (PETE) students participating in a yoga-based practices (YBP) didactics unit. The findings reveal that the students had various thoughts, feelings, and bodily sensations during their exploration of YBP and that it influenced their prospects for teaching it. The study suggests that the practice of YBP changes students' attitudes towards physical education and enhances their awareness of the present moment, which can inform their future teaching practices.
The interest in yoga, mindfulness or similar yoga-based practices (YBP) has grown exponentially in the western world, also within education, including physical education (PE). Although some studies have been conducted on YBP in PE, yoga has not yet been researched in the framework of physical education teacher education (PETE). Using a regional lifeworld approach, the purpose of this article is to investigate how PETE students experience their participation in a YBP didactics unit when it was included in the PETE programme. What thoughts, feelings and bodily sensations were evoked in the students as they explored YBP and their prospects for teaching it themselves? The project involved 13 students during their fifth year in one of Sweden's PETE programmes. Questionnaires and diaries were used as information sources. Ten of the 13 students were also interviewed. In the phenomenological analysis, the phenomenon of friction 'showed itself' to be an essential part of the perceived experiences. Friction was characterised by a tension between an absence of friction, which describes experiences of participating in YBP smoothly, and the presence of friction, which included experiences of resistance. The students also oscillated between experiences of I-here and now, and Me-my future teaching profession. At least to some extent, the YBP that was practised during the course changed the students' views of what education in 'human in motion' can be by discovering and breaking their habitual attitudes towards PE. Rather than being discussed in terms of 'benefits', the YBP practice charged the body, the room and the group with a heightened awareness of the present moment that could also be expressed verbally. It is anticipated that this kind of reflexive knowledge will help the student to make careful didactical considerations in their future teaching practices.

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