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 Undergraduate Course: Physical Education Perspectives 4 (EDUA10175)
Course Outline
| School | Moray House School of Education and Sport | College | College of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences |  
| Credit level (Normal year taken) | SCQF Level 10 (Year 4 Undergraduate) | Availability | Not available to visiting students |  
| SCQF Credits | 20 | ECTS Credits | 10 |  
 
| Summary | Physical Education Perspectives 4 (PEP4) provides students with an opportunity to focus on one of the perspectives studied in Physical Education Perspectives 3 (Philosophical Aesthetics, Science or Socio-cultural). It is hoped that this approach will enable students to develop more specialised knowledge and understanding of the body of knowledge underpinning their chosen discipline and the ways in which this may inform practice within education in general and physical education, sport and physical activity specifically. 
 PEP4 enlists accounts of discipline-based knowledge familiar to students from their first three years of study namely: Understanding Physical Culture, Sport Science and Physical Education Perspective 3.  Building on philosophical, scientific and sociological forms of
 enquiry  PEP4  continues  to  engage  students  with  one  specific,  relevant  and  applied disciplinary perspective with a view to developing their capacity to critique; apply and embed such specialist knowledge within their everyday professional practice.
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| Course description | The  20-credit  course  offers  students  an  opportunity  to  develop  their  knowledge  and understanding in one key areas of disciplinary enquiry, as these might be applicable to contexts of a teacher¿s professional action. A selected number of theoretical perspectives pertaining to either philosophical aesthetics, scientific or socio-cultural perspectives will make a contribution to the wider appreciation of how student teachers prepare for teaching and learning and the factors that can influence professional practice in schools. The aesthetic element of the PEP4 Perspectives course centres on the study of the aesthetic significance of physical activities within competing visions of physical education. It also explores the ways in which an understanding of aesthetic experience could enhance professional practice and facilitate pupils¿ engagement, active participation and life-long learning in physical education, physical activity and sport. The science element offers students the opportunity to explore in more depth the applied body of knowledge pertaining to one of the following: Biomechanics, Exercise Physiology, Skill Acquisition or Sports Psychology. Students will examine the conceptual and empirical bases upon which the scientific content is founded to evaluate the assumptions that are inherent in applying principles within the professional context. The socio-cultural element examines discourses in Physical Education and critically considers the implications of them for the professional practices of specialist teachers of Physical Education. This provides students with the opportunity to examine sociological,psychological  and  socio-psychological  perspectives  on  people  and  society  and  their implications for sport and physical education. |  
Entry Requirements (not applicable to Visiting Students)
| Pre-requisites |  | Co-requisites |  |  
| Prohibited Combinations |  | Other requirements | None |  
Course Delivery Information
| Not being delivered |  
Learning Outcomes 
| On completion of this 20-credit course, students should be able to: 
 * Critically evaluate competing discourses of curriculum and physical education from philosophical, scientific or socio-cultural perspective.
 * Review the relationships that exist between factors that influence teaching and learning within the context of physical education
 * Develop an appreciation of the factors that impact on participants¿ engagement with physical education, physical activity and sport.
 * Analyse movement competence within physical education, physical activity and sport through a number of diagnostic approaches
 * Explore the ways in which a knowledge and understanding of how a philosophical, scientific or socio-cultural perspective on physical education, physical activity and sport can inform professional practice.
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Reading List 
| INDICATIVE READING LIST 
 Aesthetics
 
 Aspers, P (2004), Empirical Phenomenology An Approach for Qualitative Research Papers in Social Research Methods  Qualitative  Series  no  9,  London  School  of  Economics and  Political  Science Methodology Institute
 Blumenfield-Jones,  D. (1997)  Aesthetic Experience, Hermenuetics and Curriculum
 http://www.ed.uiuc.edu/EPS/PES-Yearbook/97.docs/blumenfield-jones.html
 Brown, T.D. and Payne. P.G. (2009) Conceptualising the Phenomenology of Movement in Physical Education:  Implications for Pedagogical Inquiry and Development, Quest, 2009, 61, 418-441:Human Kinetics, Inc.
 Fernandez-Balboa, J-M. (1997)  (Ed).  Critical  Postmodernism  in  Human  Movement,  Physical Education and Sport, New York, Stat University of New York Press
 
 Biomechanics
 
 Hall, S. J. (2011) Basic Biomechanics. 6th Edition. Singapore: McGraw-Hill.
 Hay, J. G. (1985) The Biomechanics of Sport Techniques. 3rd Edition. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall.
 Knudson, D, and Morrison, C. (2002). Qualitative Analysis of Human Movement. 2nd Edition. Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics
 .McGinnes, P. (2013). Biomechanics of Sport and Exercise. 3Rd Edition, Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics.
 
 Exercise Physiology
 
 Armstrong. N, and Welsman. J, (1997) Young People and Physical Activity. Oxford University Press. Oxford.
 McArdle. W, Katch. F. I. and Katch, V. L. (2010) Exercise Physiology ¿ Energy, Nutrition and Human Performance. 7th Ed  Lippincott, Williams and Wilkins. Philadelphia USA.
 Rowland, T. W. (2005) Children's Exercise Physiology. 2nd Edition Human Kinetics. Leeds.
 Wilmore, J.H. and Costill D. L. (2012)Physiology of Sport and Exercise. 5th Ed Hunan Kinetics. Leeds.
 
 Skill Acquisition
 
 Davids K, Button C & Bennett S J (2007) Acquiring movement skill: a constraints-led perspective., Human Kinetics
 Magill, R. A. (2011) Motor Learning: Concepts and Applications. McGraw-Hill, Boston
 McMorris, T. (2004)Acquisition and Performance of Sports Skills, Wiley
 Savelsbergh, G. (et al) (2003) Development of Movement Coordination in Children Routledge
 Utley, A. & Still, S. (2008) Motor Control, Learning and Development. Taylor & Francis
 
 Sports Psychology
 
 Gucciardi, D.F. & Dimmock, J.A. (2008). Choking under pressure in sensorimotor skills: Conscious processing or depleted attentional resources? Psychology of Sport and Exercise, 9, 45-59.
 Ives, J.C., Straub, W.F. & Shelley, G.A. (2002). Enhancing athletic performance using digital video in consulting. Journal of Applied Sport Psychology, 14, 237-245.
 Moran, A.P. (2004) Sport and Exercise Psychology: A critical introduction. London: Routledge.
 Wilson, M & Richards, H.D.B. (2011) Putting it together. Skill packages for pressure performance. In Collins, D., Button, A. & Richards, H.D.B. (Eds) Performance Psychology: A practitioners guide. London: Elsevier
 
 Socio-Cultural
 Apple, M. (1976) Review: Curriculum as Ideological Selection Michael W. Apple Reviewed work(s): Knowledge and Control: New Directions for the Sociology of Education by Michael F. D. Young Educability, Schools and Ideology by Michael Flude; John Ahier Comparative Education Review 20, (2), pp. 209-215
 Green, K., Liston, K., Smith, A. and Bloyce, D. (2005). Violence, competition and the emergence and development of modern sports: Reflections on the Stokvis-Malcolm debate, International Review for the Sociology of Sport, 40, 119-24.
 Laker, A. (2002) The sociology of sport and physical education: an introduction, Routledge: London
 Smith,  A.  and  Parr,  M.  (2007).  Young  people¿s  views  on  the  nature  and  purpose  of  physical education: A sociological analysis, Sport, Education and Society, 12, 37-58
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Additional Information
| Graduate Attributes and Skills | Not entered |  
| Keywords | Not entered |  
Contacts 
| Course organiser | Dr Murray Craig Tel: (0131 6)51 6043
 Email: Murray.Craig@ed.ac.uk
 | Course secretary | Miss Lisa Jones Tel:
 Email: Lisa.Jones@ed.ac.uk
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