Physical education as praxis
From a historical lens, Gateman (2005) and NASPE (2005) suggested that heightened attention on children’s physical activity and weight levels resulted in confusion between the terms “physical education” and “physical activity”, and in more recent times I would add "physical literacy" (for example, see this text analysis of international physical literacy literature click here) in school settings. This past work, Gateman and NASPE provided useful distinctions between physical education and physical activity. Both focus on an attempt at distinguishing between physical activity in curriculum time and outside curriculum time to define the educative positioning of activity in Physical Education.
- The Physical Education profession, through an ability to articulate
and express an educative purpose that
is situated within the broader goals of education, is able to provide
leadership in curriculum direction through critically considered and
reasoned responses to initiatives from outside the profession.
- Students physical education experiences are
making a difference to their lived
reality now, and in the future through a curriculum that is being more than
reproductive of practice and tradition.
Before physical literacy was in vogue, NASPE (1995) defined a physically educated person: Demonstrates competency in many movement forms and proficiency in a few movement forms. Applies movement concepts and principles to the learning and development of motor skills. Exhibits a physically active lifestyle. ICHPER.SD used the following definition: A physically educated person HAS learned skills necessary to perform a variety of physical activities; IS physically fit; DOES participate regularly in physical activity; KNOWS implications of and benefits from involvement in physical activities; and VALUES physical activity and its contributions to a healthful lifestyle. (National Association for Sport and Physical Education, AAHPERD, 1992).
Education is
Learning about Self – physical, social, emotional, cognitive, spiritual
Physical Education
is the development of the physically educated person
whose state of
mind gives witness to the lived belief in and value of movement as
an essential
element of life
These beliefs are
supported by Essential Learnings which are the habits of mind of the physically
educated person
They are matured
through Learning Contexts
- Learning in the
physical
- Learning about
the physical
- Learning through
the physical
They are taught
via Guiding Pedagogies and Principles
(for example,
Mosston's Spectrum)
Through which
students engage with Learning Content:
- Skills,
Knowledge, Attitudes and Values
And experience Learning Activities
The Praxis Model for Physical Education is
intentionally structured as a cascade. It is designed to prevent
physical education from becoming a series of disconnected physical activities,
ensuring instead that every lesson is explicitly anchored in human development.
The cascade flows from a philosophical ultimate goal down
into the concrete realities of daily lesson planning.
The Peak: Education as Learning about Self
At the very top of the model sits the ultimate educative
purpose: Learning about Self across five holistic dimensions—physical,
social, emotional, cognitive, and spiritual.
This establishes that the "main game" of physical
education is not the sport itself, but what the student discovers about their
own identity, capabilities, and values through that sport. The model
posits that this self-knowledge is realized through the maturation of Habits
of Mind (such as learning to transfer skills, managing physical change, and
respecting others).
Why the Cascade Matters: Flipping the Traditional ‘Physical
Education’ Method
In what Metzler (2011) described as the traditional physical
education method, teachers plan from the bottom up: they pick a sport or
activity (Content), tell the students what to do (Pedagogy), and anticipate (hope)
that some fitness or social skill happens as a byproduct.
The habits of mind required to:
- effectively transfer learning through, about, and in the physical to other areas and means of learning.
- critically examine
and take action on social issues.
- understand how
one’s own body (and that of others) moves, changes and adapts in space and
time.
- understand that as
we learn through, about in the physical we interface with values and
beliefs.
- understand and respect the holistic person – physical, emotional, cognitive, social, and spiritual.
- develop and maintain meaningful right relationships with others and the world.
- demonstrate unconditional respect for others identity.
- understand the social construction of physical self identity, and that of others.
- work effectively and confidently with change, including physical change.
- maximise opportunities to be physically active and healthy now, and in the future.
- understand how one’s actions influence and impact on others and the world around them
- construct and deconstruct meaning and, to critically understand visual, verbal and physically literacy, the power of communication and technology.
The Praxis Model requires shifting the focus from what
activities are we doing? (coverage) to what enduring understandings are
we building about the self through movement? (transfer).
I wrote the Praxis model before I had come across the Understanding by Design (UbD) planning, which now informs my curriculum planning practice. While the Praxis Model establishes that knowledge and skills are only meaningful if they connect to a student's "states of mind" or "habits of mind", UbD’s "backward design" from intend learning outcomes ensures these deeper outcomes remain the explicit driver of the curriculum.
Here is a breakdown of how a PE teacher can
plan a unit using this integrated Praxis-UbD approach.
Stage 1: Desired Results (Aligning "Habits of
Mind" with Curriculum)
In Stage 1, you look past the sport or physical activity itself
and identify the long-term takeaways. Instead of choosing a sport first, you
select the specific Habits of Mind from the Praxis Model you want to
mature.
- Established
Goals: Align your unit with national curriculum standards but view
them through the lens of the Praxis Model's goal: Learning about Self
(physical, social, emotional, cognitive, spiritual).
- Essential
Questions (EQs): Craft open-ended, thought-provoking questions that
students will revisit throughout the unit.
- Example:
"How do the choices I make in a dynamic environment affect my
relationships with my team?"
- Example:
"How does understanding space change the way my body moves?"
- Enduring
Understandings: What should stick with students years from now?
- Example:
Students will understand that developing and maintaining right
relationships requires communication, empathy, and unconditional
respect for others' identities during competitive tension.
Stage 2: Assessment Evidence (Measuring "States of
Mind")
Traditional PE assessment often relies on isolated skill
tests (e.g., testing a tennis volley against a wall). In a praxis-oriented UbD
unit, assessment must capture the realisation of theory into practice; how
students behave, adapt, and reflect within context.
- Performance
Tasks (Authentic Assessment): Design a scenario where students must
apply their physical skills alongside their socio-emotional habits of
mind.
- Example:
A student-led Sport Education tournament. Students aren't just assessed
on gameplay; they are assessed on their role performance (e.g., Coach,
Referee, Captain) and how they cultivate inclusive environments, manage
conflict, and negotiate tactical challenges with their peers.
- Other
Evidence (Formative & Reflective): Because the Praxis Model values
cognitive reasoning and beliefs, reflection is essential.
- Example:
Digital reflection journals or post-game peer feedback loops where
students analyse tactical data or self-assess their adherence to the
chosen Habits of Mind.
Stage 3: The Learning Plan (Guiding Pedagogies &
Contexts)
With the destination (Stage 1) and evidence (Stage 2) locked
in, you design the daily experiences. This is where the core elements of the
Praxis Model - Learning Contexts and Guiding Pedagogies - dictate
the teacher's instructional choices.
1. Structuring the Three Learning Contexts
Your daily lessons must deliberately weave through the three
dimensions of movement defined in the model:
- Learning
in the physical: Developing motor competence, agility, and spatial
awareness through active gameplay.
- Learning
about the physical: Understanding the cognitive concepts of the
game (e.g., physiological adaptations to exercise).
- Learning
through the physical: Using the game or activity as a vehicle to experience and
navigate personal values, ethics, communication, and emotional
self-regulation.
2. Selecting Guiding Pedagogies
To challenge students' cognitive reasoning, the teacher must
move away from purely direct instruction (teacher-dominated replication) and
utilise more inquiry-based pedagogies that give the cogntive load to the students. For example:
- Play with Purpose: Instead of running mostly closed and open
drills, place students in modified games from the start of the lesson. Use
targeted, game-consequent conditions/constraints to bring the chosen Habit
of Mind to life.
- The
Spectrum of Teaching Styles: Deliberately shift along the spectrum
(Mobility Ability). Utilise discovery Styles E-G, so i Instead of telling
students where to move, you ask questions like: "Where is the
space opening up, and how can your teammate help you exploit it?"
This forces the maturation of cognitive processes.
Costa, A. & Garmston, J. (2002). Maturing Outcomes.
New Horizons for Learning.
Costa, A. L., & Kallick, B. (Eds.). (2008). Learning
and leading with habits of mind: 16 essential characteristics for success.
ASCD.
Gateman, V. (2005). Physical Activity and Physical
education within Health and Physical Education in New Zealand Curriculum: A
primary school teachers perspective. New Zealand Ministry of Education.
Kirk, D. (1996). The crises in school physical education -
an argument against the tide. ACHPER National Journal, 43 (4), 25-28.
NASPE. (2005). understanding the difference: Is it
physical education or physical activity?
MacAllister, J. (2013). The ‘physically educated’person:
Physical education in the philosophy of Reid, Peters and Aristotle. Educational
Philosophy and Theory, 45(9), 908-920.
Penney, D., & Chandler, T. (2000). Physical education:
What future (s)? Sport, education and Society, 5(1),
71-87.
Tinning, R., McCuiag, L. & lisahunter (2006). Teaching
health and physical education in Australian schools. Pearson Australia.

Need more time to take it in but first glance, I like it. Resonates.
ReplyDeleteJusten
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