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Conceptual Teaching and Learning in Physical Education

Concept-based curricula are more effective than topically based curricula, for the world of today and tomorrow, because they take learning to a higher level as students analyze, synthesize, and generalize from facts to higher level knowledge. Stirring The Head, Heart, and Soul: Redefining Curriculum and Instruction. 1995, ix

In most subject areas in the school curriculum we have moved from the practice of teaching isolated facts and skills to approaches that attempt to have the learner understand and integrate experiences, see patterns and relationships and make connections. This approach, referred to as "Conceptual Teaching and Learning," applies equally as well in physical education as it does in other subjects.

The goal of the physical education curriculum, in the context of a concept-based approach, implies a shift from teaching in which a sport or activity (game, dance, etc.) is the organizing element for units and lessons to an approach in which lessons and units are organized around a concept. A concept is a generalization or main idea which is transferable to other situations.

The term concept is used in this document to refer to ideas that have transfer value. Ideas about physical activity, movement skills and personal, social and cultural skills have transfer value when, after being learned in one way, context or environment, they can be used in a variety of other ways, contexts and environments.

Teachers who use a concept-based approach expect that after having taught the concept, Sending—more specifically, the overarm throwing pattern—students will transfer what they have learned to other skills and contexts where this movement pattern is used. For example, the badminton and tennis overhead smash, the volleyball serve, the javelin throw.

Students who understand how to absorb force when landing on the feet are able to use that knowledge in other situations requiring the absorption of force. For example, when performing other types of landings (landings on the hands, landings while rotating) or when receiving an object (catching a ball, collecting a soccer ball, collecting a puck using a hockey stick).

Students who have learned the concept of "zone defense" (defending an area as opposed to a player) can then apply it in various sports (e.g., floor hockey, volleyball, basketball, football, soccer). If students understand concepts such as overload and recovery, they will be able to design their own fitness programs.

While all teaching methods have a place in concept-based education, the use of exploration, discovery and problem-solving are emphasized. Transfer of learning from one situation to other times, places and contexts is a major goal.

Perhaps now more than ever, teaching for transfer is crucial. Given the tremendous variety of tasks and settings that comprise our rapidly changing world, it is clearly impossible to directly teach each particular task in each particular setting that students will encounter in their everyday lives. Instead we must strive…to find effective ways to promote the generalization of learning The Challenge of Teaching for Transfer. Teaching For Transfer: Fostering Generalization in Learning, 1995, p. 16-17


Advantages of Conceptual Teaching and Learning

It is important to understand why we need a shift toward concept-based learning. There are many good reasons. The language used in physical education becomes far less technical than in a sport or activity-based program. Moreover, the language is more universal and compatible with that of other subjects. It simplifies and should demystify the teaching of physical education.

Planning learning experiences around concepts facilitates integration of subject matter and reduces fragmentary learning. Concepts enable teachers to simplify learning experiences and help students understand the material. Rather than having to respond to each new experience as different, students can recognize that their experiences belong to groups or categories. Concepts reduce the need to treat each new piece of knowledge or each new experience as a separate category. A conceptual approach to teaching and learning prepares students to deal effectively with an ever changing and increasing knowledge base.

A conceptual approach to teaching and learning fosters higher level creative and critical thinking. This approach is more conducive to the use of student-centered instructional strategies that require students to think about what they are doing, ask questions and make decisions than is the teacher-centered, demonstration mode typical of much physical education instruction. Students become more active participants in the learning process rather than passive receivers of information.

All too frequently we engage students in non-reflective learning, specifically skills learning and memorization. Non-reflective skills learning, often associated with training, is used in our schools to get students to "mimic" experts who demonstrate some type of skill. With practice, the students do learn the skill, but are unaware of the rationale for the use of the skill, are unsure as to why the skill is effective, or are not knowledgeable of ways to employ the skill in another situation.

Teaching Thinking Through Effective Questioning, 1995, p. 66


Shifting the Organizing Centers in Physical Education

 

From

Toward

Teaching facts and skills

Conceptual teaching and learning

  • physical activities or sports are the organizing centers for units and lessons
  • the activity or sport is considered an end in itself
  • emphasis is primarily on the performance of sport skills
  • "just do it"—students engage in non-reflective skills learning
  • concepts are the organizing centers for units and lessons
  • the activity or sport is considered a means to an end; it is the medium or vehicle used to teach and learn the concepts
  • increased emphasis on understanding the "big ideas" associated with the concepts in order to facilitate transfer of learning
  • increased emphasis on thinking (reflecting) while doing—on the "how" and "why" of movement

Organizing Concepts for the Physical Education Curriculum

This chart identifies the organizing concepts that are used in planning for lessons and units. Understandings about each of these concepts are developed from grade one to grade five. Many are developed from grades one to twelve.

Perspectives

Concepts

Active Living Perspectives

  1. Regular participation in physical activity
  2. Positive attitude toward physical activity
  3. Benefits and effects of physical activity
  4. Personal growth and development
  5. Nutrition and physical activity
  6. Physical activity in a natural setting
  7. Safety while engaged in physical activity

Movement Perspective

Basic Movement Patterns

  1. Sending
  2. Receiving
  3. Evading
  4. Accompanying
  5. Locomotions
  6. Landings
  7. Statics
  8. Swings
  9. Springs
  10. Rotations

Movement Variables

  1. Body: shapes, actions, parts
  2. Space: areas, directions, levels, orientations, pathways, ranges
  3. Effort: force (weight), time (speed), flow
  4. Relationships: of body parts, to a partner or group, to equipment

Movement Principles

  1. Stability
  2. Force (production, application, absorption)

Movement Strategies

  1. Cooperative strategies
  2. Offensive strategies
  3. Defensive strategies

Personal-Social Responsibility and Cultural Awareness Perspective

  1. Respect for the rights and feelings of other
  2. Participation and effort
  3. Self-direction
  4. Caring about and helping others
  5. Using these values outside of physical education classes
  6. Work and leisure


What is the Big Idea?
Teaching and Learning
What is Common and Important in the Concept

This chart does not contain a comprehensive listing of concepts, but provides selected examples of concepts that can be learned and transferred to new situations.

 

Concepts

Big Ideas That Have Transfer Value

Learnings that students put to work in a variety of ways, contexts and environments
Active Living Perspective
  • Benefits and effects of physical activity
  • To develop muscular strength, students can increase the intensity, load, frequency and/or duration of the activity.

Movement Perspective

Basic Movement Patterns

  • Sending
  • Landing

Movement Variables

  • Body: shapes

Movement Principles

  • Stability

Movement Strategies

  • Cooperative strategies
  • When all the body joints that should be used are used, more force can be produced and the object can be sent farther and faster.
  • Landings are less jarring and there is less risk of injury when the force is absorbed over an optimum amount of time and body surface.
  • A rounded body shape rolls more efficiently than an angular body shape (a ball rolls more smoothly than a box).
  • Stability can generally be increased by increasing the size of the base of support.
  • Cooperation in the solution of movement problems allows for the emergence of diverse talents, abilities, perspectives and experiences.

Personal-Social-Cultural Perspective

  • Caring
  • Caring is enhanced when one student voluntarily helps another without expectation of reward.

The key question in all of this is: What is common, important and remains constant regardless of the way the concept is used or the context in which it is used?

Web of Possibilities for Curricula Integration - Exploring a Concept

This chart uses the Basic Movement Pattern, Landings, to demonstrate how exploring a concept can lead us to see new patterns and relationships, make connections, transfer learning and integrate many ideas.

 

For discussion of using Basic Movement Patterns in Conceptual Teaching and Learning, see the section on BMPs in Perspective Overviews.


Concepts in Physical Education Are Explored, Revisited and Applied at Different Times and

In different ways

In different contexts

In different environments
  • Cognitively—to develop understanding and thinking skills
  • Physically—to develop fitness and movement skills
  • With a partner or in a group—to develop personal- social values and skills
  • Using different instructional, approaches, strategies and methods
  • Etc.
  • Different physical activities
  • Different activity areas
  • Competitive activities
  • Cooperative activities
  • Unstructured play
  • Other subject areas
  • Etc.
  • Gymnasium
  • Classroom
  • Hallway
  • Playground
  • Home
  • Out-of-doors
  • Aquatic
  • Natural
  • Etc.

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