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Health and Physical Education: Preparing Educators for the Future 4th Revised edition [Multiple-component retail product]

(University of New England, Australia), (University of New England, Australia), (University of South Australia), (University of Southern Queensland)
  • Formatas: Multiple-component retail product, 320 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 252x205x14 mm, weight: 821 g, Worked examples or Exercises, Contains 1 Paperback / softback and 1 Digital online
  • Išleidimo metai: 16-Aug-2022
  • Leidėjas: Cambridge University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1009024043
  • ISBN-13: 9781009024044
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Multiple-component retail product, 320 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 252x205x14 mm, weight: 821 g, Worked examples or Exercises, Contains 1 Paperback / softback and 1 Digital online
  • Išleidimo metai: 16-Aug-2022
  • Leidėjas: Cambridge University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1009024043
  • ISBN-13: 9781009024044
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Health and Physical Education: Preparing Educators for the Future provides readers with the knowledge, understanding and skills required to successfully teach health and physical education in Australia.

Health and Physical Education provides readers with the knowledge, understanding and skills required to successfully teach health and physical education in Australia. With emphasis on the development of movement competence and health literacy from the early years to secondary, this book brings together research, theory, curriculum and pedagogy in an engaging introduction for pre-service teachers. Now in its fourth edition, Health and Physical Education has been thoroughly updated, and features a new chapter covering ethics, morals the and duty of care and their practical application in school health and physical education. Maintaining strong connections to learners of all ages, the text links closely to the Early Years Learning Framework and the recently updated Australian Curriculum: Health and Physical Education. Each chapter is framed by the five propositions of the Australian Curriculum: Health and Physical Education, and includes vignettes, activities and discussion and review questions to encourage reflection and group work.

Daugiau informacijos

Health and Physical Education provides the knowledge, understanding and skills required to successfully teach HPE in Australia.
Foreword vii
David Kirk
About the authors xvi
Acknowledgements xviii
Using your Vital Source enhanced eBook xx
Introduction 1(6)
Judith Miller
1 The health and physical education continuum from early childhood to secondary school
7(13)
Judith Miller
Introduction
8(1)
The Early Years Learning Framework to the Australian (to state) Curriculum
9(1)
The EYLF and the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child
10(1)
Australian Curriculum: Health and Physical Education (F-10)
10(2)
Teacher education students
12(1)
Teacher biography
13(1)
Extension
14(2)
Learning entitlement for early childhood, primary and secondary students
16(2)
Conclusion
18(1)
Review questions
18(1)
Further reading
19(1)
2 The general capabilities and health and physical education
20(15)
Judith Miller
Introduction
21(1)
General capabilities in the Australian Curriculum
22(1)
Critical and creative thinking capability
23(1)
Ethical understanding
23(1)
Digital literacy
24(1)
Personal and social capability
25(1)
Intercultural understanding
26(1)
Numeracy
26(1)
Literacy
27(1)
Developments in assessment and reporting
28(1)
Information and communication technology (ICT)
29(3)
ICT and students with disabilities
32(1)
Conclusion
32(1)
Review questions
33(1)
Further reading
34(1)
3 The foundation of movement skills
35(29)
Judith Miller
Introduction
36(2)
Movement terms
38(1)
Motor development across the early years
39(1)
The reflexive movement phase
39(3)
The reflexive phase and later learning
42(1)
The rudimentary movement phase
43(4)
Importance of play
47(1)
The fundamental movement phase
48(6)
Later childhood (ages seven to 11) sports-specific skill phase
54(3)
Further considerations in teaching physical education in a developmental curriculum
57(2)
Conclusion
59(1)
Review questions
60(1)
Further reading
61(1)
Appendix
62(2)
4 Developmental Coordination Disorder
64(23)
Judith Miller
Introduction
65(1)
Developmental Coordination Disorder
66(1)
Developmental Coordination Disorder defined
67(1)
What causes Developmental Coordination Disorder?
68(1)
Identifying children with Developmental Coordination Disorder
69(3)
Effects of Developmental Coordination Disorder on development
72(1)
Behavioural issues
72(1)
Social and emotional issues
73(2)
Academic issues
75(2)
Interventions
77(4)
Developmental Coordination Disorder in the playground and during physical education
81(1)
Implications for teachers
82(2)
Conclusion
84(1)
Review questions
84(2)
Further reading
86(1)
5 Contemporary approaches to health education and health promotion
87(38)
Susan Wilson-Gahan
Introduction
88(1)
Definitions
89(1)
Strengths-based approach
90(3)
Health education
93(1)
Health promotion
93(3)
Health promotion in educational settings
96(1)
Diversity and inclusion
97(2)
Holistic approach to health education and learning
99(1)
Comprehensive school health promotion
99(1)
The social determinants of health and wellbeing
100(2)
Health education for children and young people
102(1)
The health of children and young people in Australia
103(1)
Defining children and young people
103(1)
The National Action Plan for the Health of Children and Young People: 2020-2030
104(3)
Health of young Australians
107(5)
Overweight, obesity and disordered eating
112(1)
Mental health
113(1)
Sexual and reproductive health
113(1)
Educative purpose and what data can be used for
114(1)
Research: The backbone of credible program development
115(1)
Australian Institute of Health and Welfare
116(2)
Australian Bureau of Statistics
118(1)
Growing Up in Australia - The Longitudinal Study of Australian Children
118(1)
National Health and Medical Research Council
119(1)
World Health Organization
119(1)
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization
119(1)
Finding useful online research and resources
120(1)
Conclusion
121(1)
Review questions
122(1)
Further reading
123(1)
Acknowledgement
124(1)
6 Health and wellbeing
125(27)
Susan Wilson-Gahan
Introduction
126(1)
The purpose and importance of health education
127(2)
Including health education in the school curriculum
129(1)
Who teaches health education and when?
130(1)
Health literacy
130(1)
Build critical inquiry skills and health literacies through focused learning
131(1)
Plan developmentally appropriate programs
132(3)
Appropriate pedagogies for health education contexts and foci
135(5)
Example focus area inquiry
140(2)
Working with the curriculum
142(3)
Making health education work for all students and their communities
145(2)
Purposefully connecting health learning with other learning
147(1)
General capabilities addressed in health education
147(2)
Conclusion
149(1)
Review questions
150(1)
Further reading
151(1)
7 Teaching inclusively: Equity and diversity in education
152(23)
Robyne Garrett
Introduction
153(2)
Inclusion in health and physical education: What does it mean?
155(1)
What can theory tell us about working towards inclusion and equity?
156(1)
The construction of difference in health and physical education
157(1)
Gender and identity differences
157(3)
Students with a disability
160(4)
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander young people
164(3)
Ethnicity and religion
167(3)
Different body types
170(2)
Conclusion
172(1)
Review questions
173(1)
Further reading
174(1)
8 Pedagogy
175(24)
Robyne Garrett
Introduction
176(1)
Performance, play and embodied pedagogy
177(1)
The need for critical approaches to pedagogy
178(1)
The hidden curriculum and powerful learning in health and physical education
178(2)
Critical pedagogy
180(1)
Pedagogical decision-making and instructional approaches
181(2)
Command (direct) approaches
183(1)
Task approaches
183(1)
Practice approaches
184(1)
Reciprocal/cooperative approaches
185(1)
Inclusion approaches
185(1)
Inquiry approaches
186(1)
Guided discovery approaches
186(1)
Problem-solving approaches
187(1)
Free exploration
187(2)
Curriculum models in health and physical education
189(1)
Models-based practice
189(1)
Teaching Personal and Social Responsibility model
190(1)
Sport Education model
191(1)
Teaching Games for Understanding/Play Practice
192(1)
Cooperative Learning model
193(1)
Emerging activist models
194(1)
A creative and body-based model of learning
195(1)
Conclusion
196(1)
Review questions
197(1)
Further reading
198(1)
Acknowledgement
198(1)
9 Planning for teaching and learning
199(32)
Susan Wilson-Gahan
Introduction
200(1)
The curriculum
201(1)
Curriculum development specific to the Australian context
201(2)
The Australian Curriculum: Health and Physical Education
203(1)
Planning with educative purpose using the curriculum
203(1)
Elements of effective planning for teaching and learning
204(2)
Collaboration in planning
206(2)
Purposefully connected or integrated curriculum
208(1)
Planning in early childhood settings
209(1)
Planning in a nutshell
210(1)
Teaching programs
210(10)
Teacher evaluation: Reflective practice
220(1)
Health and safety
220(1)
Cross-curriculum priorities
221(1)
General capabilities
222(1)
Integrating digital technologies
222(1)
Lesson plans
223(1)
General lesson structure
224(2)
Lesson design
226(1)
Flexibility and adaptability
226(1)
Learning experiences
227(1)
Learning experience checklist
227(1)
Conclusion
228(1)
Review questions
229(1)
Further reading
230(1)
10 Assessment in health and physical education
231(28)
Susan Wilson-Gahan
Introduction
232(1)
Assessment defined
233(1)
Educative purpose of assessment
234(1)
Types of assessment
234(1)
Assessment for learning
234(2)
Assessment of learning
236(1)
Assessment as learning
236(1)
Performance-based assessment
236(1)
Quality assurance: Characteristics and principles of designing assessment
237(1)
Aligned
237(1)
Equitable
238(1)
Ongoing
238(1)
Transparent
238(1)
Evidence-based
239(1)
Informative
239(1)
Assessment in early childhood settings
239(1)
Designing assessment
240(1)
What to assess in health and physical education
240(2)
How to assess in health and physical education
242(4)
Performance product versus process
246(1)
Portfolios of work
246(1)
Criteria for assessment
247(1)
Principles of assessment
247(1)
Validity
248(1)
Reliability
248(1)
Efficiency
249(1)
Fairness, equity and flexibility
249(1)
Alignment of teaching, learning, assessing and reporting
250(1)
High-stakes testing and multiple measures of assessment
251(1)
Assessment of movement and physical performance
252(1)
Health and physical education assessment: Contested space
253(3)
Conclusion
256(1)
Review questions
257(1)
Further reading
258(1)
11 Duty of care, ethics and morals in physical education and sport
259(21)
John Haynes
Introduction
260(1)
Definitions
260(1)
Duty of care
261(2)
Codes of conduct, ethics and morals
263(1)
Code of conduct
263(1)
Ethics
264(3)
Summary: Key differences between code of ethics and code of conduct
267(1)
Morals
267(1)
Legal issues in schools
268(1)
Mandatory reporting
269(1)
Critical incidents
269(1)
Negligence
269(3)
Malpractice
272(1)
Outside the classroom
273(1)
Emergency care and accident reports
273(1)
Sport
274(1)
Physical education
275(2)
Outdoor physical activities
277(3)
Conclusion 280(1)
Review questions 280(1)
Further reading 281(1)
Bibliography 282(27)
Index 309
Judith Miller is an Adjunct Associate Professor in the School of Education at the University of New England, New South Wales. After gaining her undergraduate teaching degrees from Portland State University, Oregon, where Dr Don Hellison was formulating his Teaching Personal and Social Responsibility (TPSR) model, Judith taught physical education in a K7 school in Oregon. These learning and teaching experiences were augmented by nine years of secondary school teaching in rural Australia. She then pursued higher degrees in research, with a focus on coordination and skill levels of primary schoolaged children, and has been making major contributions to HPE Teacher Education for three decades at UNE. Judith has been an active contributor to a range of international professional Health and Physical Education communities and is currently focused on the facilitation of the research agenda of the Bhutanese Ph.D. scholars she is continuing to supervise. Susan Wilson-Gahan is a Health and Physical Education Program Coordinator, Bachelor of Education, Health and Physical Education specialisation programs, and Lecturer in the Faculty of Business, Education, Law and Arts, School of Education Linguistics, Adult and Specialist Education at the University of Southern Queensland (USQ). She is a PhD candidate examining sociocultural influences on the development of super-elite sports performance people. Prior to entering academia, Susan was a curriculum leader and secondary school teacher of Health Education and Physical Education for over 30 years 33 years, with additional experience in primary school teaching and special education. She worked at the Queensland Studies Authority on the Queensland Curriculum, Assessment and Reporting (QCAR) Framework, including as part of the Years 19 Essential Learnings and Standards curriculum development team and as a writer for the QCAR Assessment Bank. Susan is passionate about the holistic nature of health and wellbeing and the contribution of health and wellbeing to enhanced educational outcomes. Part played by health in academic engagement. She has a continuing involvement in sports administration at all levels. Susan is an active contributor to the Australian Council for Health, Physical Education and Recreation (ACHPER), as well as to the Australian Association for Research in Education (AARE). Robyne Garrett is Senior Lecturer in Health and Physical Education, dance and teaching methodologies in the Education Futures Academic Unit, University of South Australia. Her undergraduate teaching degree specialised in Physical Education and Dance and she taught for a number of years at diverse secondary schools before furthering her dance background at the Laban Centre for Movement and Dance in London. After this time she was integral to introducing Dance as a subject within the curriculum and served as both a curriculum writer and professional educator in the field. Her teaching experiences in Australia and England include age groups from early childhood to Year 12 as well as experience in special education and with students at risk. Her doctoral studies focused on the construction of gender in physical activity contexts and she has since worked in the tertiary sector where her creative and body-based methodologies are widely utilised as strategies for developing teaching pedagogy. She is committed to socially just and culturally sustainable practice within Health and Physical Education as well as classroom practice and her ongoing research interests include gender and inclusive pedagogies, as informed by critical, culturally responsive and affect theories. John Haynes has recently been appointed as an Adjunct Lecturer for the School of Education at the University of New England. After teaching Physical Education, Health and Personal Development for 30 years, 15 of which as Head Teacher in NSW public secondary schools, he spent 20 years lecturing at the University of New England. His first tertiary qualification was a three year Diploma in Physical Education from Wollongong Teachers College. He started teaching in Sydney and then moved to a country appointment. Whilst teaching, he gained a Bachelor of Arts Degree and a Master of Education (Physical Education). His PhD was undertaken whilst lecturing at UNE. During his 20 year academic career John has written, delivered and coordinated many preservice teacher education units designed to prepare primary teachers for the challenges associated with teaching Physical Education. Also during this time he: was an elected member of the University academic board; undertook course coordination; was selected to write the NSW HSC PDHPE examinations; worked for several years with a local school to assess and then assist students with developmental coordination disorder; and, served as President of the Armidale sub branch of ACHPER. John has written and published numerous academic articles, and has presented his research findings at many International and National Conferences. He has an ongoing consultancy with the Royal University of Bhutan(RUB), which initially involved researching the feasibility for the implementation of a Diploma in Sports Coaching and Administration, and then assisting with writing curriculum. The success of the Diploma has since led to the introduction a new Degree in Physical Education at RUB.