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Pedagogical Models in Physical Education

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Title: Pedagogical Models in Physical Education


1
Session 5
  • Pedagogical Models in Physical Education

2
TEACHING GAMES FOR UNDERSTANDING The work of Rod
Thorpe and Dave Bunker Loughborough University UK
3
TGFU - THE BEGINNING
  • In the early 80s, Rod Thorpe and Dave Bunker had
    begun to think about how games could be taught
    differently
  • Primarily, this was fuelled by the failure to
    retain children in games and their early
    exclusion.
  • A result of this was to develop an approach to
    games that develops the understanding of the
    game, specifically
  • Its structure
  • Some rules
  • Its meaning
  • Its point
  • Roles of the players
  • The type of game that it is

4
THE BASIS OF TGFU
  • Games can be enjoyed by all in spite of ability
  • Skills seldom emerge from drills that are
    repetitive
  • Isolated practice does not transfer to game
  • Games Sense is lost, or indeed not ever
    developed!

5
TYPES OF GAMES
  • Invasion games
  • Purposes
  • to invade and control territory
  • Retain possession
  • To create scoring opportunities
  • Get behind defences
  • Striking and fielding games
  • Purposes
  • Strike a ball into space
  • To run a given distance to score
  • To defend a space with the bat
  • Divided Court games
  • Purpose
  • Score on oppositions side of court
  • strike ball(or similar within space but away from
    opponent
  • Rebound games
  • Purpose
  • Hit ball against a wall such that it does not
    return to opponent
  • Control an area where ball is likely to travel
    most (the T in squash
  • Move opponent around

6
TGFU - THE MODEL
  • The model starts and finishes with the game
  • It is about decision making within contexts
  • It starts with game appreciation
  • It looks at both what to do and how to do it
  • It does not deny skill development
  • Is there evidence from pedagogy research about
    TGFU as an effective method of instruction?
  • Very little
  • Some from the USA which fails to take into
    account the broader ends of understanding
    approaches
  • Some from USA which is very positive
  • Some from the UK which is supportive
  • Study in Australia by David Kirk and Ross Brooker
    which is still active but which shows promise
  • However in 2001, the first international TGFU
    conference was held in New Hampshire - an
    overwhelming vote of confidence in TGFU
    effectiveness.

7
TGFU - WHERE TO FOR YOU?
  • Be bold and experiment
  • Use the game to teach the game
  • Differentiate expectations for learners
  • Condition games creatively to develop requisite
    skills
  • Be prepared to change games and activities to
    suit differing contexts
  • Be patient. Learners will not develop an
    understanding overnight.
  • They will learn the essence of games and develop
    games sense
  • What precedents are there?
  • Australian Rugby Union
  • English Football Association
  • Queensland Cricket

8
MOSSTONS TEACHING SPECTRUM
  • From Command to Discovery

9
WHAT IS THE SPECTRUM?
  • In the mid 1960s Musska Mosston came up with the
    idea of what he called a unified theory of
    teaching.
  • He called this the Spectrum of Teaching Styles.
    Its basic premise was that it went from Command
    to Discovery.
  • Over the last 35 years, the spectrum has
    continued to evolve.
  • Mosston felt that teaching physical education
    could be conducted in a number of different ways
    using a variety of styles.
  • The styles he claimed were contingent upon
  • The purposes of the lesson
  • The lines of communication
  • Proposed channels of development
  • Mosston was keen to point out that at no time did
    he want to suggest that one style was necessarily
    better than another

10
WHAT IS THE SPECTRUM?
  • The Non-Discovery Styles
  • Command Style (A)
  • Practice Style (B)
  • Reciprocal Style (C)
  • Self Check Style (D)
  • Inclusion Style (E)
  • These styles are largely teacher centred
  • Most decisions about content, timing etc are with
    teacher
  • These forms of teaching/coaching will be most
    familiar to you

11
THE SETS OF DECISIONS
  • The pre-impact set
  • Decisions made before the lesson
  • Involves (most importantly) choice of content and
    organisational structure
  • The impact set
  • Decisions made during the lesson e.g. pace,
    timing start and finish times
  • The post-impact set
  • Feedback and other evaluative procedures..
    Possibly reflection

12
ACROSS THE DISCOVERY THRESHOLD
  • The Discovery Styles
  • Guided Discovery (Style F)
  • Divergent (Style G)
  • Style F (Guided Discovery) is based on the notion
    of convergence - that the right answer can be
    found by asking questions that yield the right
    answer
  • Questions needs to be pitched at the right level
    so that each correct answer is one more step
    towards the solution
  • This style is more about the learning of a
    concept which might be transferable e.g. fielding
    a ground ball and say goal-keeping in soccer
  • It is the first move across the Discovery
    Threshold, though the teacher still has all the
    answers
  • It requires the teacher to modify conventional
    behaviour
  • Urge to give the answer needs to be tempered
  • The skill is in asking the questions appropriately

13
ACROSS THE DISCOVERY THRESHOLD
  • Style G The Divergent Style is, according to
    Mosston this style is the natural extension to
    Style F- Guided Discovery
  • This style is consistent with the contemporary
    work in the teaching of games
  • Rod Thorpes ideas on games sense and games
    for understanding
  • Allan Launders ideas on Play Practice
  • Mosstons claim here is
  • The divergent style (style G) occupies a unique
    place on the Spectrum. For the first time the
    learner is engaged in discovering and producing
    options within the subject matter. This style
    involves the learner in the human capacity for
    diversity it invites the learner to go beyond
    the known. (Mosston and Ashworth, 1986, p. 190)

14
ACROSS THE DISCOVERY THRESHOLD
  • Whilst Mosston says that the fields of physical
    education, dance and sport are rich in
    opportunities to come up with solutions to
    movement problems, we seldom see examples of it
    in practice
  • Reasons
  • Power and control
  • efficiency argument
  • Perceived discipline problems
  • Professional risk
  • Why do it? Generally, the variety of human
    movement is regarded as infinite hence one
    assumes the human is capable of adaptation to
    stimulus
  • Recent work in skill acquisition seems to confirm
    this
  • Skill emerges from the interaction of
    constraints
  • Supported by Schmidts idea of variability
  • Recent work in constructivism also adds support
  • In other words, humans construct responses

15
THE KEY TO DIVERGENCE
  • The teacher makes decisions about activity area
    (consistent with work program/syllabus etc)
  • Learner makes decisions about specifics
  • The solutions of the learner become the subject
    matter
  • The teacher manipulates the constraints
  • This pedagogical approach is not new and it
    underpins much of the work in educational
    gymnastics, movement education, and more recently
    games
  • Now though we have a more robust model and
    research data to support the value of child
    centred pedagogy in physical activity

16
SPORT EDUCATION
  • Learning through Sport

17
Reasons for Sport Education
  • Formalises sport as the subject matter of
    physical education
  • Objectives for work in physical education can
    be easily defined and determined
  • Logical development as basically already exists
  • Reinstates the importance of sport which some
    scholars has been lost because of progressive
    ideology in physical education (Seidentop)
  • Provides a developmental path for the work of
    physical education
  • Creates a framework for inter (and intra)-school
    competition generally regarded as healthy

18
But what is Sport Education?
  • There is general confusion here as the
    terminology is not clear
  • For some it is simply the most appropriate label
    for what is done in what is generally referred to
    as PE
  • Hence it is naturalised and normalised
    (Foucault, 1980)
  • In some curricula it is a much closer description
    of what goes on (in other words) the subject
    content matter an example is the NCPE (UK)
  • Others take a different view that it is
    education through sport the work of Ken
    Alexander, Andrew Taggart and the team at Edith
    Cowan University in Perth
  • highly developed program involving many schools
    in a broad cross-curricular project with sport as
    the main vehicle.
  • much broader role description within sport
  • broader range of learning outcomes

19
Problems with Sport Education?
  • May still lead to exclusivity particularly if the
    model is simply regarded as natural
  • May result in lots of duplication given the
    exponential growth of community sport
  • Sport may not provide good foundational early
    motor skill acquisition
  • The learning available may be limited
  • It may not address motor problems that can be
    overcome by a broader range of motor experiences
  • There is little evidence that it really leads to
    lifelong habits of physical activity involvement
  • It may actively work against this though in an
    unintended way

20
AUSSIE SPORT - An example of Primary Sport
Education
  • Visits are infrequent
  • Seen as time off for the classroom teacher
  • generally little follow up
  • usually lots of brightly coloured equipment
  • staff members are usually trained in physical
    education or coaching
  • programs often based around an award system
  • games and equipment often modified to
    appropriate levels but not always in appropriate
    ways

21
OVER TO YOU
  • Think about your Sport Education experience last
    week. Was it a worthwhile exercise?
  • What are the pros and cons about using Sport
    education as a primary PE teacher? In groups of
    3-4 discuss and list these.
  • Report back to the group.
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