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‘It is a case of changing your thought processes, the way you actually teach’: implementing a complex professional learning agenda in Scottish physical education

机译:“这是改变您的思维方式和实际教学方式的一种情况”:在苏格兰体育中实施复杂的专业学习计划

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Background: It has been proposed that twenty-first century physical education needs to be reorientated and restructured to meet the lifelong learning needs of pupils from diverse socio-cultural, emotional, and developmental backgrounds. It follows that quality physical education (PE) Continuing Professional Development (CPD) opportunities for practising professionals are needed to support these aims. In Scotland, professional and policy-making groups have specifically called for at least 120 minutes of quality physical education to be delivered each week by appropriately trained staff. Purpose: This paper highlights three phases of PE CPD beginning in 2001 that have been structured to include teaching professionals working in Scottish primary schools. We illustrate how collaborative learning communities emerged through the PE CPD. While emphasising the merits of collaborative learning principles, we also describe how these learning communities operated as complex educational systems. We specifically discuss how these communities were linked in a ‘nested’ relationship with local schools and local authorities. We also discuss how learning communities self-organised and innovated in relation to the instigation of ‘turbulent’ practices and knowledges. Findings: The study follows ten practitioners who participated in Basic Moves PE CPD programmes over the past 10 years in Scotland. During the initial phase (2001-2004), the participants were enthused about the reflective and collaborative learning model that was used in regular workshops and courses. These members felt that this approach to PE CPD improved on traditional one-day and generic courses. In Basic Moves PE CPD courses, administrators provoked critical and even uncomfortable discussions in order to challenge teachers' pre-existing views of physical education. Consequently, the group organised and emerged as a ‘community of practice’. Many of the study participants continued to work together and even became Basic Moves PE CPD instructors themselves. However, as the programme increased in popularity and expanded to a national level in 2004, the PE CPD followed an ‘empty vessel’ model, whereby new participants were given course material over a short duration in a few centralised workshops. Feedback suggested that this ‘top down’ approach would not facilitate the emergence of learning communities, as many of those involved in local PE delivery became isolated and felt marginalised in their practice. Subsequent discussions led to the development of learning communities that were supported in local communities by former and current participants. These ‘tutor networks’ reflected the complex relationships that existed between pupils, teachers, headteachers, PE specialists, local authority managers and policy makers. Conclusion: Our analysis suggests that the PE practitioners in our study worked alongside a range of educational stakeholders within a broader ‘nested system’ that was constantly evolving and changing. Accordingly, we argue that contemporary PE CPD must challenge practitioners to become critical and innovative learners in the context of dynamic learning communities. This version of PE CPD requires sustained support at the local level and directly involves PE practitioners, their peers, and local authority leadership in the planning and operational phases.View full textDownload full textKeywordscomplexity theory, collaborative learning, communities of practice, teacher learning, professional developmentRelated var addthis_config = { ui_cobrand: "Taylor & Francis Online", services_compact: "citeulike,netvibes,twitter,technorati,delicious,linkedin,facebook,stumbleupon,digg,google,more", pubid: "ra-4dff56cd6bb1830b" }; Add to shortlist Link Permalink http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17408989.2011.565469
机译:背景:已经提出,需要重新定位和重构二十一世纪的体育教育,以满足来自不同社会文化,情感和发展背景的学生的终生学习需求。随之而来的是,需要为执业专业人员提供高质量的体育(PE)持续专业发展(CPD)机会,以支持这些目标。在苏格兰,专业和决策团体明确要求,每周至少由经过适当培训的人员提供120分钟的优质体育教育。目的:本文重点介绍了从2001年开始的PE CPD的三个阶段,这些阶段的结构包括在苏格兰小学工作的教学专业人员。我们说明了如何通过体育CPD形成协作学习社区。在强调协作学习原则的优点的同时,我们还描述了这些学习社区如何作为复杂的教育系统运作。我们专门讨论了这些社区如何与当地学校和地方当局建立“嵌套”关系。我们还将讨论学习社区如何在“动荡”的实践和知识的鼓动下自我组织和创新。调查结果:这项研究追踪了过去10年中在苏格兰参加了Basic Moves PE CPD计划的10名从业者。在初始阶段(2001年至2004年),参与者对常规研讨会和课程中使用的反思性和协作式学习模型很感兴趣。这些成员认为,这种针对体育CPD的方法在传统的一日和普通课程上有所改进。在Basic Moves体育CPD课程中,管理人员进行了挑衅性甚至不舒服的讨论,以挑战教师先前对体育的看法。因此,该小组组织起来并成为“实践共同体”。许多研究参与者继续合作,甚至自己成为了Basic Moves PE CPD讲师。但是,随着该计划的普及和在2004年扩展到全国范围,PE CPD遵循了“空船”模式,在几个集中的讲习班中,新参与者在短时间内获得了课程资料。反馈表明,这种“自上而下”的方法不会促进学习社区的兴起,因为许多参与本地PE交付的人变得孤立,并在实践中被边缘化。随后的讨论导致了学习社区的发展,这些社区在以前和现在的参与者的支持下在当地社区得到了支持。这些“导师网络”反映了学生,教师,校长,体育专家,地方政府经理和政策制定者之间的复杂关系。结论:我们的分析表明,我们研究中的体育从业者与范围广泛的“嵌套系统”中不断发展变化的教育利益相关者一起工作。因此,我们认为当代PE CPD必须挑战从业者在动态学习社区的背景下成为批判性和创新性学习者。此版本的PE CPD需要地方层面的持续支持,并直接让PE从业者,其同行和地方当局领导参与计划和运营阶段。查看全文下载全文关键字复杂性理论,协作学习,实践社区,教师学习,专业developmentRelated var addthis_config = {ui_cobrand:“泰勒和弗朗西斯在线”,servicescompact:“ citeulike,netvibes,twitter,technorati,delicious,linkedin,facebook,stumbleupon,digg,google,更多”,发布号:“ ra-4dff56cd6bb1830b”};添加到候选列表链接永久链接http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17408989.2011.565469

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