TY - JOUR
T1 - Re-imagining performance spaces and locations in ecological dynamics: implications for pedagogical practices in physical education
AU - Rothwell, Martyn
AU - Bjerke, Øyvind
AU - Strafford, Ben
AU - Robinson, Timothy
AU - Haslingden, Craig
AU - Navarro, Martina
AU - Davids, Keith
N1 - Will be OA
PY - 2024/7/21
Y1 - 2024/7/21
N2 - Many places and locations for physical education, and the associated pedagogies, limit the enrichment of the individual-environment system. Strengthening this relationship can provide children and youth with greater functionality to navigate a diverse range of environments more effectively, leading to a positive relationship with sport and physical activity across the lifespan. The purpose of this position paper is to draw attention to the role that environmental constraints play in shaping the relationship between places, locations, and pedagogical practice in physical education. More specifically, we demonstrate how the design of spaces for physical education, and movement competencies more generally, emerge under political, historical, cultural and socio-economic factors. Ecological dynamics is presented as an explanatory framework to position the concept of open spaces as a means of enriching individual-environment interactions via guided discovery and exploratory behaviour. In unpacking these key concepts, we highlight innovative approaches to the design of open spaces for physical activity and sport, exemplified by the Skills Garden and PLAYCE initiatives. To move beyond the theoretical arguments presented in this article, we encourage practitioners and applied scientists to collaborate and integrate sub-disciplines, applied ideas, and research methods to re-imagine the design of spaces for learning. To take full advantage of redesigned spaces in strengthening the individual-environment system, practitioners need to adopt a model of physical education that complements these contemporary learning spaces.
AB - Many places and locations for physical education, and the associated pedagogies, limit the enrichment of the individual-environment system. Strengthening this relationship can provide children and youth with greater functionality to navigate a diverse range of environments more effectively, leading to a positive relationship with sport and physical activity across the lifespan. The purpose of this position paper is to draw attention to the role that environmental constraints play in shaping the relationship between places, locations, and pedagogical practice in physical education. More specifically, we demonstrate how the design of spaces for physical education, and movement competencies more generally, emerge under political, historical, cultural and socio-economic factors. Ecological dynamics is presented as an explanatory framework to position the concept of open spaces as a means of enriching individual-environment interactions via guided discovery and exploratory behaviour. In unpacking these key concepts, we highlight innovative approaches to the design of open spaces for physical activity and sport, exemplified by the Skills Garden and PLAYCE initiatives. To move beyond the theoretical arguments presented in this article, we encourage practitioners and applied scientists to collaborate and integrate sub-disciplines, applied ideas, and research methods to re-imagine the design of spaces for learning. To take full advantage of redesigned spaces in strengthening the individual-environment system, practitioners need to adopt a model of physical education that complements these contemporary learning spaces.
KW - Spaces and Locations
KW - Pedagogy
KW - Historical and Socio-Cultural Constraints
KW - Learning Design
KW - Ecological Dynamics
U2 - 10.1177/1356336X241260245
DO - 10.1177/1356336X241260245
M3 - Article
SN - 1356-336X
JO - European Physical Education Review
JF - European Physical Education Review
ER -