Fun and enjoyment in physical education: young people's attitudes
Fun and enjoyment in physical education: young people's attitudes
Fun and enjoyment are recurring themes in physical education literature, although there has been some debate concerning the distinction between the two concepts. Whereas enjoyment is generally regarded as helpful in fostering positive attitudes towards physical education, fun has not always been considered an appropriate outcome of physical education. This paper seeks to explore further the meanings young people give to the terms fun and enjoyment and how this relates to their attitudes towards physical education. The data reported in this paper are drawn from a study carried out over a three-year period that investigated the attitudes of children towards physical education during the transition between Key Stage 2 (KS2; 7- to 11-years old) and Key Stage 3 (KS3; 11- to 14-years old). Information was collected using a questionnaire, focus groups and interviews in one borough in England. Analysis revealed that fun and enjoyment featured prominently in reports on attitudes towards physical education, but that the meaning attributed to these concepts appeared to change as they progressed to KS3. Fun was found to be the single most frequently expressed reason for positive feelings associated with physical education at KS2. As such, fun appeared to be a critical factor for making physical education enjoyable. However, following transition, many children began to describe fun in terms of learning challenge rather than in relation to the hedonic response to playing games. This shift in the ways that the participants valued physical education at KS3 appears to indicate a more sophisticated approach to their learning
499-516
Dismore, Harriet
9981d51e-d034-4da1-8f07-289095572001
Bailey, Richard
63ce614a-cf3c-444a-aca7-579a3d53cf71
2011
Dismore, Harriet
9981d51e-d034-4da1-8f07-289095572001
Bailey, Richard
63ce614a-cf3c-444a-aca7-579a3d53cf71
Dismore, Harriet and Bailey, Richard
(2011)
Fun and enjoyment in physical education: young people's attitudes.
Research Papers in Education, 26 (4), .
(doi:10.1080/02671522.2010.484866).
Abstract
Fun and enjoyment are recurring themes in physical education literature, although there has been some debate concerning the distinction between the two concepts. Whereas enjoyment is generally regarded as helpful in fostering positive attitudes towards physical education, fun has not always been considered an appropriate outcome of physical education. This paper seeks to explore further the meanings young people give to the terms fun and enjoyment and how this relates to their attitudes towards physical education. The data reported in this paper are drawn from a study carried out over a three-year period that investigated the attitudes of children towards physical education during the transition between Key Stage 2 (KS2; 7- to 11-years old) and Key Stage 3 (KS3; 11- to 14-years old). Information was collected using a questionnaire, focus groups and interviews in one borough in England. Analysis revealed that fun and enjoyment featured prominently in reports on attitudes towards physical education, but that the meaning attributed to these concepts appeared to change as they progressed to KS3. Fun was found to be the single most frequently expressed reason for positive feelings associated with physical education at KS2. As such, fun appeared to be a critical factor for making physical education enjoyable. However, following transition, many children began to describe fun in terms of learning challenge rather than in relation to the hedonic response to playing games. This shift in the ways that the participants valued physical education at KS3 appears to indicate a more sophisticated approach to their learning
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e-pub ahead of print date: 11 June 2010
Published date: 2011
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Local EPrints ID: 344549
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/344549
ISSN: 0267-1522
PURE UUID: 814aa192-98a2-421b-a5e6-4ea93ae43c62
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Date deposited: 25 Oct 2012 09:03
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 12:14
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Author:
Harriet Dismore
Author:
Richard Bailey
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