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Articles

From Command to Constructivism: Canadian Secondary School Physical Education Curriculum and Teaching Games for Understanding

Pages 321-342 | Published online: 07 Jan 2015
 

Abstract

Canadian physical educators have fought long and hard to be recognized as legitimate contributors to school curricula. In claiming alliances with discourses of medicine and morality, science and psychology, proponents of physical education have sought to be recognized and validated within the educational milieu. These claims have fundamentally influenced physical educators’ conceptions of what knowledge is important in physical education, and contributed to a particular regime of “truth” that foregrounds content, performance and notions of “technocratic-rationality.” In this article I explore how cultural perspectives from the past have influenced the secondary physical education curricular offerings of today, and then examine how an approach to teaching concepts of team and individual game tactics and strategies, Teaching Games for Understanding (TGfU), that relies ontologically and epistemologically upon pedagogically developed constructivist notions of teaching and learning for its existence and its knowledge base may challenge the dominant discourse of technocratic-rationality. In this article a brief overview of significant historical elements affecting curriculum development in physical education will be examined. Two forms of constructivism will be explored, and TGfU as an alternative to traditional curricular and pedagogical approaches to games instruction, offering potentially appealing learning experiences for many students will be examined.

Notes

Notes

1 Canada does not have a national curriculum for physical education, or any other secondary school subject area. Curriculum development and implementation is the responsibility of the Ministry/Department of Education of each province or territory.

2 Across Canada “secondary school” usually refers to the final three or four years of public schooling—usually grades 9 or 10–12. Curriculum documents, however, may span the divide between intermediate and senior grades. For example, British Columbia’s physical education curriculum documents group grades 8–10 together, and grades 11–12. For the purposes of this essay, I will be making reference to all provincial physical education curriculum documents that include in them programming for the final 4 years of public schooling for students. That is, I mean “secondary schooling” to encompass grades 9–12.

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