Copyright © National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
Educating the Student Body: Taking Physical Activity and Physical Education to School
Recommendations
375
Rationale
Teaching physical education effectively and safely requires spe-
cific knowledge about physical/mental development, body composition
( morphology) and functions (physiology and biomechanics), and motor
skills development and acquisition. Teaching physical education also
requires substantial knowledge and skill in pedagogy, the science and art of
teaching, which is required for any subject. In addition,
because health is
associated with academic performance, priority should be given to educat-
ing both classroom and physical education teachers regarding the impor-
tance of physical activity for the present and future physical and mental
health of children.
The current wave of effort to curb childhood
physical inactivity has
begun to influence teacher education programs. Data appear to suggest that
training programs for physical education teachers are beginning to evolve
from a traditionally sport- and skills-centered model to a more comprehen-
sive physical activity– and health-centered model. However, education pro-
grams for physical education teachers are facing
a dramatic decrease in the
number of kinesiology doctoral programs offering training to future teacher
educators, in the number of doctoral students receiving this training, and
in the number of professors (including part-time) offering the training.
Additional data suggest a shortage of educators in higher education institu-
tions equipped to train future physical education teachers. With unfilled
positions, these teacher education programs are
subject to assuming a mar-
ginal status in higher education and even to being eliminated.
Professional development—including credit and noncredit courses,
classroom and online venues, workshops, seminars, teleconferences,
and webinars—improves classroom instruction and student achieve-
ment, and data suggest a strong link among professional development,
teacher learning and practice, and student achievement. The most impact-
ful statement of government policy on the preparation
and professional
development of teachers was the 2002 reauthorization of the Elementary
and Secondary Education Act. Although Title I of the act places highly
qualified teachers in the classroom, Title II addresses the same goal by
funding professional development for teachers. According to the No Child
Left Behind Act, professional development should
be offered to improve
teachers’ knowledge of the subject matter they teach, strengthen their class-
room management skills, advance their understanding and implementation
of
effective teaching strategies, and build their capabilities to address dis-
parities in education. This professional development should be extended to
include physical education instructors as well.
Copyright © National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
Educating the Student Body: Taking Physical Activity and Physical Education to School
376
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