The A-Z of social justice physical education : part 2 / Dillon Landi, Shrehan Lynch, Jennifer Walton-Fisette.
By: Landi, Dillon [author]
Contributor(s): Lynch, Shrehan [author] | Fisette, Jennifer Walton- [author]
Copyright date: 2020Subject(s): Physical education and training -- Safety measures | Physical education and training -- Social aspects In: JOPERD : The Journal of Physical Education, Recreation & Dance vol. 91, no. 5: (May/Jun. 2020), pages 20-27.Summary: Education has the ability to both reproduce and transform broader social structures. Yet, teachers’ responsibilities are constantly increasing whilst budgets, resources, and staffing are depleted. We argue that we are living in a time of great uncertainty and precarity. As physical educators, we should make attempts to be socially conscious of this precarity and provide equitable environments for all students. This article (the second installment of a two-part series) is an attempt to make an important step in enacting a socially just and informed physical education program. In so doing, we highlight specific ways that teachers and teacher educators can prepare for and teach about precarity in physical education. By providing resources, readings, and examples from practice, we provide a framework that promotes ethics of value, care, and zeal for others.Item type | Current location | Home library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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Education has the ability to both reproduce and transform broader social structures. Yet, teachers’ responsibilities are constantly increasing whilst budgets, resources, and staffing are depleted. We argue that we are living in a time of great uncertainty and precarity. As physical educators, we should make attempts to be socially conscious of this precarity and provide equitable environments for all students. This article (the second installment of a two-part series) is an attempt to make an important step in enacting a socially just and informed physical education program. In so doing, we highlight specific ways that teachers and teacher educators can prepare for and teach about precarity in physical education. By providing resources, readings, and examples from practice, we provide a framework that promotes ethics of value, care, and zeal for others.
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