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Physical Education Curriculum: Concepts, Scope, Sequence, and Activities, Slides of Physical Education and Motor Learning

Guidance on designing physical education curriculum, focusing on concepts, goals, outcomes, and activity selection. It covers the importance of developing individual student fitness and physical activity habits, creating a scope and sequence, suggested concepts, and criteria for selecting activities. Relevance, qualitative, and practical issues are also discussed.

Typology: Slides

2012/2013

Uploaded on 09/02/2013

aapti
aapti 🇮🇳

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Designing the Concepts
Curriculum
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Designing the Concepts

Curriculum

Exit Outcomes

Program Outcomes

Course Outcomes

Unit Outcomes

Lesson Outcomes

Elementary

Middle

High (^) Choice

Foundation skill

Develop a Scope & Sequence

  • What should students know by the end of their learning experiences in a program? - K- - 6- - 9-
  • How will you sequence those learning experiences?

Curriculum Development

  • Criteria for selecting activities to include:
    • Relevance to goals and desired outcomes
    • Is it personally meaningful to students?
    • Is it practical to the program? Can you teach it?

Relevance Issues

  • Obtain information to help guide decisions on curriculum development - From research and current literature - From observation and visitations of exemplary programs - Expert opinions of people who are members of your curriculum group

Qualitative Issues

  • To what extent is „living in‟ the program a pleasurable, fun experience?
  • While we look to long-term benefits, we must also consider is present life „in‟ the program enjoyable?
  • Make an effort to select activities that provide a focused, meaningful experience for students

Appropriateness of activities

  • A dilemma often is whether to limit a program to current student interests or to expand their interests
  • Do students have the pre-requisite skills, conditioning, or knowledge for experiences you want to include?

Sequence Decisions

  • Attempt to provide continuity and progression within each unit of instruction as well as from unit to unit and year to year
  • Things to consider:
    • Developmental readiness of students
    • Interest/motivation of students
      • This may peak at certain ages or times of year
  • Quality programs are not limited to conditioning activities, but provide an educational perspective that emphasized understanding as well as performance - Cognitive knowledge about the relationship between health and affective development - Affective dispositions to pursue regular activity

Deliver “Up”

  • Do lesson outcomes lead “up” to achievement of exit outcomes?
  • Do you tie a fitness concept to a physical activity?
  • How well do you use a “set induction” to introduce the lesson, explain the lesson content, and provide a closure activity for assessment of outcomes?