Abstract
This article contributes to the ongoing discussion on practice-based teacher education in physical education teacher education (PETE) programs. In this article we situate core practices within the practice-based teacher education movement, define and describe core practices for physical education, and discuss how to use them in the PETE curriculum and in coursework. Defining the knowledge base of PETE, in this case in terms of core teaching practices, has several advantages. First, it creates a consensus on what is the knowledge base, which in turn can be refined or challenged. Second, it allows for a shared professional language to be used. Finally, it allows curriculum maps to be used to structure the intentional and detailed development of core practices across a PETE program.
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Phillip Ward
Phillip Ward ([email protected]) is a professor of kinesiology, and Kelsey Higginson and Kyuil Cho are doctoral students in the Department of Human Sciences at The Ohio State University in Columbus, OH.