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EMR205
Assessment Task 1
PDHPE: You and the Profession
Natalie Hoogers 11470189        Due Date: 27.3.13
Me and My Experiences
My personal experience of PDHPE,
sport and physical activity was quite
extensive growing up. During school
years I actively participated in Sport
lessons once a week and PE lessons
throughout the week. I have always
had a love for physical activity and
this was evident in my participation
and enjoyment in school sports and
PE lessons. I also found Personal
Development and Health lessons
fascinating and have developed a
firm understanding of a Holistic
Approach to Health.
As a young child I trialled most sports that our
small town offered; basketball, swimming,
athletics, tennis, dancing and netball. My
parents were extremely supportive of sport
and encouraged me to pursue the sports I
loved. Athletics and Basketball were the
sports I was passionate about and continued
to pursue. Majority of my childhood consisted
of long car trips around the state to the many
representative opportunities these sports
provided. These two sports developed many
skills that I transferred into social sports;
netball, volleyball and cricket. If it were
possible to be involved in every sport I would
have been, but due to time and money this
was not an option. As I got older I continued
representative basketball but focused less on
athletics. The main reason for this was time.
Making time for school work, basketball,
athletics and socialising was a difficult task.
Today I play basketball, volleyball and netball
at a social level.
My parents were the main influence
on my physical activities. Their
support, encouragement, finances,
values and commitment are what
have shaped my experience with
Physical activity and health. My
Basketball and Athletics coaches
and team mates were also significant
influences in my life and remain key
influences. Alongside learning many
practical skills, I learnt many of my
values and social skills from
participating in physical activity eg.
teamwork skills. Although many of
these skills were taught in PD/H
theory lessons, I grasped these from
being involved in the practical aspect
of PD/H/PE and sport.


  Key Influences
My past experiences have founded an extremely positive
attitude towards PDHPE. I have a rich value placed upon PDHPE in
the school environment as I believe physical activity does not only
affect the physical health of a person, but the mental and social health
also. I believe it is important for all kids to be exposed to physical
activity. I was fortunate enough to have parents in a position that
allowed me to participate in sports outside of schools. For students
who do not have that privilege, PDHPE is the important mode for such
skills and values to be developed. In saying this, I also believe the
subject needs to be taught well for this outcome to be a positive one
rather than a negative for all students, not just those who are deemed
„good‟ at sport. Although PDHPE lessons assisted in my positive
outlook on health and physical activity, these lessons did not make me
fit or healthy. Instead they informed me of the choices I would need to
make in order to live a healthy lifestyle. I know my role as a teacher is
not to make my students „fit‟ or „healthy‟, but to provide them with the
skills and knowledge for them to make their own informed choices
towards a healthy lifestyle (Kirk, 1996). As an upcoming teacher, I
understand the value and importance of PDHPE and endeavour to
transfer the same values of PDHPE to all students who I teach. The
positive experience I‟ve had over the years is the same positive
experience I‟d like all students to have when in my classroom.
The PDHPE Educator
Organise
   d          Physically
              fit

Enthusiasti         Appropriat
c                   e clothing


   Content     Variety
   knowledg    of skills
   e           and
               activities
Effective            Knows
communicato          students
r
Knowledge
Skills and Abilities
                              - K-6 PDHPE Syllabus
- Organised: objectives       - Large range of
  and content, smooth           activities
  transitions                 - Holistic Health
                                                             Physical
- Physical Skills: variety    - Technology                   Characteristics
  of sports,                  - Knowledge of                 - Fit/Active/Healthy
  demonstrations                students, their abilities    - Average weight/toned
- Health Skills                 and needs.                   - Wears appropriate
- Engaging/fun/motivati                                        clothing; runners,
  ng                                                           tracksuit, polo, hat.
- Time management
- Commitment                                Types of Teaching
          Actions &                         Activities
          Communication                     - Engaging activities
          -   Confident                     - Variation
          -   Approachable                  - Appropriate for student skills,
          -   Enthusiastic                    gender, age
          -   Effective communicator        - Fun and motivating
          -   Clear concise                 - Non-exclusive (all can
              instructions                    participate)
          -   Voice: variance,              - Good use of resources
              confidence, projection
PDHPE and Educational
Settings – My position
What value/non-value do you believe PDHPE
has from Primary Educational Setting?


         “Arnold [Arnold‟s model 1988] positions physical education as a
medium for education about movement involving theoretical understanding,
education in movement involving practical knowledge and education through
movement leading to moral and social outcomes. It is the ability of the
performer to make strategic decisions in complex and dynamic situations,
acting as an intelligent performer, that is the goal of physical education from
this perspective.” (Kirk, Nauright, Hanrahan, 1996). I believe successful
PDHPE education involves two components; practical skills and knowledge
and theoretical understandings. These two components, if taught well,
ensure students have the intelligence to make well informed decisions that
affect the lifestyle they live. With this in mind, it is obvious that PDHPE
education holds a valuable place within the education system. It is not
necessarily focused on the specific skills or knowledge but the person as a
whole and the decisions they learn to make that will affect the lifestyle that
the live. I believe this is one of the most valuable skills to pass on to
students.
I am aware of the many misconceptions that are placed on
PDHPE education. PDHPE is often seen as a non-serious subject, “a
break from real work” (Kirk, Nauright, Hanrahan, 1996), “merely playing
games” (Kirk, Nauright, Hanrahan, 1996), time waster or the subject with
less importance and therefore can be „wagged‟ or replaced from other
school activities (Kirk, Nauright, Hanrahan, 1996). I myself at school would
choose PDHPE as the subject to miss if I had to do extra curriculum
activities. Why? This subject was given a less valuable status to any other
subject. These misconceptions and stereotypes often result in lack of
motivation from students and teachers, lack of resources, less time
allocations and reduced staffing for the delivery of PDHPE lessons. Time
allocations are a good indicator of the value that is placed on PDHPE
education. “Most sources suggest time allocated to physical activity in the
school curriculum is relatively low.” (Kirk, Nauright, Hanrahan, 1996).
“ACHPER recommends that all primary school children have at least 3
hours of physical education each week and that school sport must not be
included within this allocation.” (Kirk, Nauright, Hanrahan, 1996). My
personal experience, although a good experience, did not meet these time
allocations. A normal week would consist of half an hour of practical
lessons and half an hour of theoretical lessons, on top of two hours of
sport.
If you were to compare yourself to the PDHPE Educator
in the previous section, how would you compare?


          In comparison to the PDHPE Educator in the previous section, I am
currently far from being a confident PDHPE Educator. I do however feel I
possess many of the skills and characteristics, but lack understanding of
content. I am an organised person who has good time management skills. I
am committed, engaging, fun and motivating. I have many physical skills that I
could transfer into almost any sport and provide effective demonstrations. I do
however feel I wouldn‟t be organised with the objectives and outcomes that I
am required to teach. My knowledge of the K-6 PDHPE syllabus is very
limited. So although my skills meet those of a confident educator, I would not
know what to teach. I also have a limited bank and range of activities. I did
PDHPE as an elective in the Higher School Certificate and have a great
knowledge of the Holistic approach to health. Physically, I am fit and healthy. I
have good communication skills, although my voice projection could be
improved on. Overall, in comparison to the PDHPE Educator in the previous
section, I believe I will make a confident PDHPE educator once I gain a better
knowledge of the PDHPE K-6 Syllabus.
How do you feel about teaching PE in the K-6 context?


          My overall feeling about teaching PE in the K-6 context is –
Underprepared. I believe PDHPE is a very valuable and worthwhile Key
Learning Area (KLA) and should be taught well. At the current stage in my
studies, I do not have the content knowledge required to teach what is
expected from the PDHPE K-6 Syllabus. In saying this, I believe that after
acquiring syllabus content knowledge, I would feel very capable in teaching
PE in the K-6 context. I possess many of the skills needed to be a confident
PDHPE teacher and believe I would be able to transfer these skills into
teaching PE lessons in the near future. After making this conclusion about how
I feel about teaching PE, I read the article What strands for physical education
in primary schools? by Tinnings, Kirk and Evans (1993) and realised I am
among many female teachers who feel as though they have limited knowledge
to teach PDHPE. “There is a widespread belief among teachers and principals
that generalists simply do not have the knowledge to teach skills (in
movement)… They claim that it is female teachers who most often consider
themselves to be unqualified to teach physical education.” (Tinnings, 1993, pg.
3).
What do you believe teachers need to know and be able to do to
confidently teach PDHPE? Provide justification of these attributions.


I believe there are many things teachers need to know and be able to do to
teach PDHPE confidently. Among many skills and characteristics these I believe
to be the main things teachers need to be able to do:

• Passionate:
Teacher needs to want to teach the subject and be passionate about it. “When
asked to identify the necessary characteristics of a good physical education
specialist teacher, staff at Montville spoke of the important of personality and
enthusiasm, sound organisational skills, the ability to motivate others and to
sell the subject to others.” (Tinnings, 1993). A PDHPE teacher must have
many skills such as organisation, time management, but I believe that overall,
the teacher needs to have a passion for the subject. With passion and
enthusiasm, the same passion and enthusiasm will be found within the
students as they participate in the lessons. PDHPE teachers need to be able
to show their passion for the subject to all students and allow all students to
participate in that enthusiasm.
• Subject Content:
Teacher needs to know the subject content, the aim and objectives for the
subject. For a teacher to confidently teach students the PDHPE subject, they
first need to understand what their students should know and what they need
to know. Teachers need to be able to teach all Strands within the syllabus. “In
order for students to achieve the outcomes of this syllabus it is essential that
teaching/learning occurs in each of the strands in each stage of primary
education.” (BoS NSW, 2007). As well as knowing what students are required
to learn, teachers need to have a variety of activities and plans to teach these
outcomes.
• Safe Environment:
I believe teachers need to be able to create
a safe and non-exclusive environment for
all students. This means valuing the
contributions made by all students and
taking the time to meet students at all
levels. Being able to create a safe
environment, students will feel valued
within the learning environment.
References
Board of Studies NSW. (2007). Personal development, health and
physical education K-6: syllabus. Sydney: BoS NSW. Retrieved
March 15,          2013 from,
http://k6.boardofstudies.nsw.edu.au/go/personal-development-
health-and-physical-education-pdhpe

Kirk, D. (1996). The crisis in school physical education: An
argument          against the tide. The ACHPER National Journal,
43(4), pp. 25-27.

Kirk, D., Nauright, J., Hanrahan, S., Macdonald, D. & Jobling, I.
(1996). Physical education and curriculum. The sociocultural
          foundations of human movement. Melbourne: Macmillan
          Education Australia. Chapter 10.

Tinning, R., Kirk, D. & Evans, J. (1993). What stands for physical
education          in primary schools? Learning to teach physical
education.         Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice Hall.
Chapter 2.

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EMR Assessment

  • 1. EMR205 Assessment Task 1 PDHPE: You and the Profession Natalie Hoogers 11470189 Due Date: 27.3.13
  • 2. Me and My Experiences
  • 3. My personal experience of PDHPE, sport and physical activity was quite extensive growing up. During school years I actively participated in Sport lessons once a week and PE lessons throughout the week. I have always had a love for physical activity and this was evident in my participation and enjoyment in school sports and PE lessons. I also found Personal Development and Health lessons fascinating and have developed a firm understanding of a Holistic Approach to Health.
  • 4. As a young child I trialled most sports that our small town offered; basketball, swimming, athletics, tennis, dancing and netball. My parents were extremely supportive of sport and encouraged me to pursue the sports I loved. Athletics and Basketball were the sports I was passionate about and continued to pursue. Majority of my childhood consisted of long car trips around the state to the many representative opportunities these sports provided. These two sports developed many skills that I transferred into social sports; netball, volleyball and cricket. If it were possible to be involved in every sport I would have been, but due to time and money this was not an option. As I got older I continued representative basketball but focused less on athletics. The main reason for this was time. Making time for school work, basketball, athletics and socialising was a difficult task. Today I play basketball, volleyball and netball at a social level.
  • 5. My parents were the main influence on my physical activities. Their support, encouragement, finances, values and commitment are what have shaped my experience with Physical activity and health. My Basketball and Athletics coaches and team mates were also significant influences in my life and remain key influences. Alongside learning many practical skills, I learnt many of my values and social skills from participating in physical activity eg. teamwork skills. Although many of these skills were taught in PD/H theory lessons, I grasped these from being involved in the practical aspect of PD/H/PE and sport. Key Influences
  • 6. My past experiences have founded an extremely positive attitude towards PDHPE. I have a rich value placed upon PDHPE in the school environment as I believe physical activity does not only affect the physical health of a person, but the mental and social health also. I believe it is important for all kids to be exposed to physical activity. I was fortunate enough to have parents in a position that allowed me to participate in sports outside of schools. For students who do not have that privilege, PDHPE is the important mode for such skills and values to be developed. In saying this, I also believe the subject needs to be taught well for this outcome to be a positive one rather than a negative for all students, not just those who are deemed „good‟ at sport. Although PDHPE lessons assisted in my positive outlook on health and physical activity, these lessons did not make me fit or healthy. Instead they informed me of the choices I would need to make in order to live a healthy lifestyle. I know my role as a teacher is not to make my students „fit‟ or „healthy‟, but to provide them with the skills and knowledge for them to make their own informed choices towards a healthy lifestyle (Kirk, 1996). As an upcoming teacher, I understand the value and importance of PDHPE and endeavour to transfer the same values of PDHPE to all students who I teach. The positive experience I‟ve had over the years is the same positive experience I‟d like all students to have when in my classroom.
  • 8. Organise d Physically fit Enthusiasti Appropriat c e clothing Content Variety knowledg of skills e and activities Effective Knows communicato students r
  • 9. Knowledge Skills and Abilities - K-6 PDHPE Syllabus - Organised: objectives - Large range of and content, smooth activities transitions - Holistic Health Physical - Physical Skills: variety - Technology Characteristics of sports, - Knowledge of - Fit/Active/Healthy demonstrations students, their abilities - Average weight/toned - Health Skills and needs. - Wears appropriate - Engaging/fun/motivati clothing; runners, ng tracksuit, polo, hat. - Time management - Commitment Types of Teaching Actions & Activities Communication - Engaging activities - Confident - Variation - Approachable - Appropriate for student skills, - Enthusiastic gender, age - Effective communicator - Fun and motivating - Clear concise - Non-exclusive (all can instructions participate) - Voice: variance, - Good use of resources confidence, projection
  • 11. What value/non-value do you believe PDHPE has from Primary Educational Setting? “Arnold [Arnold‟s model 1988] positions physical education as a medium for education about movement involving theoretical understanding, education in movement involving practical knowledge and education through movement leading to moral and social outcomes. It is the ability of the performer to make strategic decisions in complex and dynamic situations, acting as an intelligent performer, that is the goal of physical education from this perspective.” (Kirk, Nauright, Hanrahan, 1996). I believe successful PDHPE education involves two components; practical skills and knowledge and theoretical understandings. These two components, if taught well, ensure students have the intelligence to make well informed decisions that affect the lifestyle they live. With this in mind, it is obvious that PDHPE education holds a valuable place within the education system. It is not necessarily focused on the specific skills or knowledge but the person as a whole and the decisions they learn to make that will affect the lifestyle that the live. I believe this is one of the most valuable skills to pass on to students.
  • 12. I am aware of the many misconceptions that are placed on PDHPE education. PDHPE is often seen as a non-serious subject, “a break from real work” (Kirk, Nauright, Hanrahan, 1996), “merely playing games” (Kirk, Nauright, Hanrahan, 1996), time waster or the subject with less importance and therefore can be „wagged‟ or replaced from other school activities (Kirk, Nauright, Hanrahan, 1996). I myself at school would choose PDHPE as the subject to miss if I had to do extra curriculum activities. Why? This subject was given a less valuable status to any other subject. These misconceptions and stereotypes often result in lack of motivation from students and teachers, lack of resources, less time allocations and reduced staffing for the delivery of PDHPE lessons. Time allocations are a good indicator of the value that is placed on PDHPE education. “Most sources suggest time allocated to physical activity in the school curriculum is relatively low.” (Kirk, Nauright, Hanrahan, 1996). “ACHPER recommends that all primary school children have at least 3 hours of physical education each week and that school sport must not be included within this allocation.” (Kirk, Nauright, Hanrahan, 1996). My personal experience, although a good experience, did not meet these time allocations. A normal week would consist of half an hour of practical lessons and half an hour of theoretical lessons, on top of two hours of sport.
  • 13. If you were to compare yourself to the PDHPE Educator in the previous section, how would you compare? In comparison to the PDHPE Educator in the previous section, I am currently far from being a confident PDHPE Educator. I do however feel I possess many of the skills and characteristics, but lack understanding of content. I am an organised person who has good time management skills. I am committed, engaging, fun and motivating. I have many physical skills that I could transfer into almost any sport and provide effective demonstrations. I do however feel I wouldn‟t be organised with the objectives and outcomes that I am required to teach. My knowledge of the K-6 PDHPE syllabus is very limited. So although my skills meet those of a confident educator, I would not know what to teach. I also have a limited bank and range of activities. I did PDHPE as an elective in the Higher School Certificate and have a great knowledge of the Holistic approach to health. Physically, I am fit and healthy. I have good communication skills, although my voice projection could be improved on. Overall, in comparison to the PDHPE Educator in the previous section, I believe I will make a confident PDHPE educator once I gain a better knowledge of the PDHPE K-6 Syllabus.
  • 14. How do you feel about teaching PE in the K-6 context? My overall feeling about teaching PE in the K-6 context is – Underprepared. I believe PDHPE is a very valuable and worthwhile Key Learning Area (KLA) and should be taught well. At the current stage in my studies, I do not have the content knowledge required to teach what is expected from the PDHPE K-6 Syllabus. In saying this, I believe that after acquiring syllabus content knowledge, I would feel very capable in teaching PE in the K-6 context. I possess many of the skills needed to be a confident PDHPE teacher and believe I would be able to transfer these skills into teaching PE lessons in the near future. After making this conclusion about how I feel about teaching PE, I read the article What strands for physical education in primary schools? by Tinnings, Kirk and Evans (1993) and realised I am among many female teachers who feel as though they have limited knowledge to teach PDHPE. “There is a widespread belief among teachers and principals that generalists simply do not have the knowledge to teach skills (in movement)… They claim that it is female teachers who most often consider themselves to be unqualified to teach physical education.” (Tinnings, 1993, pg. 3).
  • 15. What do you believe teachers need to know and be able to do to confidently teach PDHPE? Provide justification of these attributions. I believe there are many things teachers need to know and be able to do to teach PDHPE confidently. Among many skills and characteristics these I believe to be the main things teachers need to be able to do: • Passionate: Teacher needs to want to teach the subject and be passionate about it. “When asked to identify the necessary characteristics of a good physical education specialist teacher, staff at Montville spoke of the important of personality and enthusiasm, sound organisational skills, the ability to motivate others and to sell the subject to others.” (Tinnings, 1993). A PDHPE teacher must have many skills such as organisation, time management, but I believe that overall, the teacher needs to have a passion for the subject. With passion and enthusiasm, the same passion and enthusiasm will be found within the students as they participate in the lessons. PDHPE teachers need to be able to show their passion for the subject to all students and allow all students to participate in that enthusiasm.
  • 16. • Subject Content: Teacher needs to know the subject content, the aim and objectives for the subject. For a teacher to confidently teach students the PDHPE subject, they first need to understand what their students should know and what they need to know. Teachers need to be able to teach all Strands within the syllabus. “In order for students to achieve the outcomes of this syllabus it is essential that teaching/learning occurs in each of the strands in each stage of primary education.” (BoS NSW, 2007). As well as knowing what students are required to learn, teachers need to have a variety of activities and plans to teach these outcomes. • Safe Environment: I believe teachers need to be able to create a safe and non-exclusive environment for all students. This means valuing the contributions made by all students and taking the time to meet students at all levels. Being able to create a safe environment, students will feel valued within the learning environment.
  • 17. References Board of Studies NSW. (2007). Personal development, health and physical education K-6: syllabus. Sydney: BoS NSW. Retrieved March 15, 2013 from, http://k6.boardofstudies.nsw.edu.au/go/personal-development- health-and-physical-education-pdhpe Kirk, D. (1996). The crisis in school physical education: An argument against the tide. The ACHPER National Journal, 43(4), pp. 25-27. Kirk, D., Nauright, J., Hanrahan, S., Macdonald, D. & Jobling, I. (1996). Physical education and curriculum. The sociocultural foundations of human movement. Melbourne: Macmillan Education Australia. Chapter 10. Tinning, R., Kirk, D. & Evans, J. (1993). What stands for physical education in primary schools? Learning to teach physical education. Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice Hall. Chapter 2.