1st Edition

Becoming a Physical Education Teacher

By Gary Stidder Copyright 2015
    224 Pages
    by Routledge

    224 Pages
    by Routledge

    Teaching physical education is a challenging but rewarding occupation. Finding a way into the profession can be a daunting task while regular changes in government policy can make it hard to stay up to date. This engaging new book explains the process of becoming and being a teacher of secondary school physical education, from the various routes of entry into the profession, to the realities of being a qualified PE teacher, to the ways in which experienced teachers can become teacher educators and nurture the next generation. It combines rich personal accounts of teaching in, and being taught, physical education, with practical advice for trainees, newly qualified teachers and established professionals, with an emphasis throughout on the importance of critical self-reflection.

    The book begins by exploring the nature and purpose of physical education and examining the historical development of initial teacher training. It examines recent changes in training, policy and curriculum, and offers an overview of the various ways of becoming a PE teacher, including the Post Graduate Certificate in Education (PGCE) and school and employment based routes. The book offers advice on what to expect at interview, meeting the standards for qualifying to teach, and on how to survive the difficult first year as a newly-qualified teacher. It also outlines the challenges and rewards of being a qualified teacher, mentor or curriculum leader, as well as a teacher educator within higher education.

    Concise, helpful, and filled with sensible insights based on real experiences of teaching physical education, Becoming a Physical Education Teacher is an essential read for anybody considering entering the profession, or for students, trainees, newly qualified or experienced teachers wanting to understand better the process of becoming, and being, a successful PE teacher.

    Introduction  Section One: What you need to know  1. Why become a Physical Education Teacher?  2. How to become a Physical Education Teacher  3. What is a Physical Education Teacher?  4. What is Physical Education?  5. What is Physical Education Policy?  Section Two: The Journey Ahead  6. Becoming a Trainee Physical Education Teacher  7. Becoming a Physical Education Teacher  8. Becoming a Curriculum Leader for Physical Education  Section Three: Moving On  9. Being a Reflective Physical Education Teacher  10. Being a Mentor in Physical Education  11. The Wider Role of Being a Physical Education Teacher  12. The Twenty First Century Physical Education Teacher

    Biography

    Gary Stidder is the PGCE route leader for Physical Education initial teacher training and coordinator of initial teacher education for Physical Education at the University of Brighton’s School of Sport and Service Management. Gary is an ex-secondary school Physical Education teacher and was awarded a Fulbright Scholarship to the USA during 1990-1991. Gary is the co-founder of the University of Brighton’s pioneering ‘Football 4 Peace International Project’ in Israel, Northern Ireland and The Gambia which has been operating since 2001. In July 2008 Gary was presented with a national award from the Association of Physical Education (AfPE) for his contribution to research and scholarship in the field of Physical Education. In 2013 Gary was awarded the University of Brighton’s award for Staff Excellence in Community Engagement in recognition of his contribution to widening participation

    'Revealing and illustrating many pathways to teaching physical education, this book provides a helpful foundation for future teachers and will prove useful to current practitioners, teacher-prep programmers, and administrators.  A former physical education teacher and an award-winning researcher in physical education, Stidder (Univ. of Brighton, UK) outlines the historical evolution and relevance of physical education in schools and the purpose and place of physical education in curricula.  The book provides a clear picture of what to expect in the profession and will be useful for mentors and those building a model of instruction for preparing future educators.  This reviewer particularly appreciated the personal accounts of teachers in the field, which give a glimpse of the everyday joys and struggles of physical educators.  In clarifying the routes to teaching physical education, the book could serve to attract potential students.  In addition, in a secondary physical education curriculum, the book can serve as a textbook for an introductory foundations course, in which it will reinforce the evolution from first-year study to student teaching, certification, interviewing, and employment as a teacher of physical education.'

    - B. Myers, Northern Michigan Univesity, CHOICE connect, January 2016 Vol. 53 No. 5