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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
181

A descriptive analysis of the assessment techniques used by supervisors of physical education student teachers

Treanor, Laura Jeanne 06 June 2008 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to describe the various assessment techniques used by supervisors of physical education student teachers. A survey instrument was sent to physical education supervisors at colleges and universities listed in the 38th Annual Guide to Accredited Education Programs/Units. A total of 177 Surveys were sent out; 109 were returned for an overall response rate of 61.5%. The study generated demographic information about supervisors of physical education student teachers as well as information about the assessment practices of the supervisors. The frequency with which certain assessment techniques (ie. intuitive assessment, eyeballing, rating scales, checklists, systematic observation, anecdotal notes, reflection and conferencing) and assessment modes (live observation, videotape and audiotape) were used was also collected. Factors that supervisors assess with the particular assessment techniques (ie. time, management, lesson content) were also analyzed. The data from this study indicate that all assessment techniques and modes are used to some degree by supervisors of physical education student teachers. However, some techniques are used more frequently than others and some only when certain modes are used. The assessment technique most frequently used by supervisors was conferencing (97%) and least frequently was eyeballing (42%). Overall, live observation was utilized most often (97%) and audiotape least often (5%). The data also indicate that supervisors use many different techniques of assessment to gather information about such factors as discipline, organization, Management and time. It was concluded that some factors were assessed through a variety of techniques, perhaps indicating that supervisors combine the information from different assessment techniques in order to more accurately assess their student teachers. / Ed. D.
182

The Formulation of a Screening Program for the Selection and Guidance of Prospective Women Teachers of Physical Education at Bowling Green State University

Luedtke, Dorothy M. January 1950 (has links)
No description available.
183

The Formulation of a Screening Program for the Selection and Guidance of Prospective Women Teachers of Physical Education at Bowling Green State University

Luedtke, Dorothy M. January 1950 (has links)
No description available.
184

The effects of self-assessment via tape recorded lessons on the verbal interaction behavior of student teachers in physical education /

Dessecker, William R. January 1975 (has links)
No description available.
185

Comparison of beginning and experienced teachers' receptivity to and concerns with physical education curriculum change. / 比較不同教學經驗的教師對體育科課程改革之接受程度及關注問題 / Comparison of beginning and experienced teachers' receptivity to and concerns with physical education curriculum change. / Bi jiao bu tong jiao xue jing yan de jiao shi dui ti yu ke ke cheng gai ge zhi jie shou cheng du ji guan zhu wen ti

January 2005 (has links)
Wong Chi Wing = 比較不同教學經驗的教師對體育科課程改革之接受程度及關注問題 / 黃智穎. / Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2005. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 87-94). / Text in English; abstracts and appendices in English and Chinese. / Wong Chi Wing = Bi jiao bu tong jiao xue jing yan de jiao shi dui ti yu ke ke cheng gai ge zhi jie shou cheng du ji guan zhu wen ti / Huang Zhiying. / Abstract --- p.i / Acknowledgements --- p.iii / List of Figures --- p.viii / List of Tables --- p.ix / Chapter CHAPTER ONE --- Introduction --- p.1 / Background of the Study --- p.1 / Purpose of the Study --- p.8 / Objectives of the Study --- p.9 / Definition of Terms --- p.9 / Delimitations --- p.10 / Limitations --- p.10 / Significance of the Study --- p.10 / Chapter CHAPTER TWO --- Review of Literature --- p.12 / Education Reform and Curriculum Change --- p.12 / The Situation in the World --- p.12 / The Situation in Hong Kong --- p.13 / Professionalization and De-professionalization --- p.16 / "The Concept of Profession, Professional and Professionalization" --- p.16 / The Concept of De-professionalization --- p.17 / Teachers' Attrition --- p.18 / Teachers' Frustration --- p.19 / Professionalization and De-professionalization Tension --- p.20 / The Concept of Professionalization and Deprofessionalization in Teaching --- p.22 / Receptivity to Education Reform --- p.23 / Teacher Professional Development --- p.24 / Occupational Socialization --- p.26 / Experienced VS Beginning Teachers --- p.27 / Beginning Teacher --- p.27 / Experienced Teacher --- p.30 / Comparing Beginning Teacher and Experienced Teacher --- p.31 / Comparing Beginning and Experienced Teacher in Physical Education --- p.33 / Summary --- p.36 / Chapter CHAPTER THREE --- Method --- p.37 / Participants --- p.37 / Research Design --- p.37 / Instrumentation --- p.38 / Teachers' Receptivity to Change --- p.38 / Interview --- p.39 / Procedures --- p.39 / Questionnaire Administration --- p.39 / Individual Interviews --- p.39 / Statistical Analysis --- p.40 / Questionnaire Data --- p.40 / Interview Data --- p.40 / Chapter CHAPTER FOUR --- Results --- p.41 / Questionnaire Analyses --- p.41 / Demographic characteristic of participants --- p.41 / Mean scores of all participants --- p.42 / Mean scores of beginning and experienced teachers --- p.43 / Interview Analyses --- p.45 / Teachers' receptivity to physical education curriculum change --- p.45 / Teachers' concerns with teaching condition --- p.49 / Chapter CHAPTER FIVE --- Discussion --- p.52 / Teachers' receptivity to change --- p.52 / Beginning and experienced teachers' receptivity to curriculum change --- p.53 / Attitude toward the guidelines --- p.53 / Perceived non-monetary cost-benefit --- p.54 / Perceived practicality of the guidelines --- p.56 / Perceived school support --- p.58 / Issues of concern --- p.60 / Perceived support from others --- p.61 / Behavioral intentions --- p.63 / Teachers' concerns with teaching conditions --- p.63 / Commitment --- p.64 / Cooperation with students --- p.65 / Cooperation with the staff and an ideal staffroom environment --- p.67 / Career support --- p.68 / Routinization and intensification --- p.69 / Tension in work and private life --- p.71 / Competence --- p.72 / Teachers' challenges --- p.73 / Image and effectiveness --- p.75 / Duties and career plan --- p.77 / Power --- p.78 / The status of physical education --- p.78 / Decision making and authority --- p.80 / Chapter CHAPTER SIX --- "Summary, Conclusions, and Recommendations" --- p.82 / Summary --- p.82 / Conclusions --- p.82 / Limitations --- p.84 / Recommendations --- p.85 / REFERENCES --- p.87 / APPENDIX A --- p.95 / APPENDIX B --- p.97 / APPENDIX C --- p.99 / APPENDIX D --- p.105 / APPENDIX E --- p.109 / APPENDIX F --- p.111 / APPENDIX G --- p.113 / APPENDIX H --- p.116
186

Does a coeducational environment affect performance for female students in physical education classes?

Sandoval, Adriana Aja 01 January 2008 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to investigate how a coed environment affects a female student's performance in physical education classes. The focus of this study is middle school students. Most middle school students are normally going through puberty and many environmental changes at a new school. These changes can influence a student's performance often in P.E., causing a decrease in performance and participation which can lead to physical inactivity.
187

The attitudes of secondary school form five students in Hong Kong towards physical education: implications forprogramme design

Leung, Sheung-ping., 梁想平. January 1997 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Education / Master / Master of Education
188

Pratiques de régulation didactique en éducation physique et sportive et professionnalité enseignante / Practices of didactic regulations in physical education and scholarship of teaching

Boudard, Jean-Marie 14 December 2010 (has links)
La recherche a pour objectif de décrire et de comprendre les pratiques de régulation didactique de cinq enseignants en EPS. Les régulations didactiques sont, dans le cadre de notre recherche, les communications langagières adressées à un ou plusieurs élèves engagé(s) dans une tâche donnée. Nous nous intéressons notamment à la façon dont sont gérés et mis en scène les savoirs à caractère technique. En effet, les régulations sont des temps privilégiés de guidage technique et plus généralement de co-construction de significations partagées à propos du savoir. Cinq études de cas sont réalisées. Les enseignants sont volontaires et ont au moins une dizaine d’années d’expérience. Ils sont filmés et enregistrés lors de six séances. Un entretien fait suite aux six observations. Il a pour but de mieux comprendre les déterminants des pratiques en recueillant le point de vue des enseignants. Les résultats montrent que les régulations sont des gestes typiques de l’enseignement de l’EPS. Néanmoins, des conduites de moindre et de non régulation sont mise à jours et analysées. En outre, des phénomènes en lien avec le savoir sont décrits (éviction, masquage, disparition). Si les pratiques observées sont en partie inhérentes à l’enseignement de l’EPS, elles ne sont pas que le fruit d’assujettissements. En fonction de leurs expériences et de leurs particularismes, les enseignants ont rejeté, mis à l’écart les gestes de régulations, ou, au contraire, les ont intégré à leur professionnalité. Tous ont ressenti et ressentent encore les difficultés inhérentes à la régulation. Tous n’ont pas les mêmes ressources pour y faire face, ni la même volonté de s’y sentir efficaces. / Research has as objective to represent and to understand the practices of didactic regulation of five teachers in Physical education. Didactic regulations are, as pal1 of our research, communications and gestures were addressed in one or several pupils enlisted man (en) in a given task. We are notably interested in the manner are managed and staged know ledges with technical character. In effect, regulations are privileged time of technical guidance and more in general co-building of signification shared regarding knowledge. Five studies of case are accomplished. The teachers are volunteers and have at least a dozen years of experience. They are filmed and recorded during six sessions. A maintenance follows the six observations. It is aimed at understanding the determiners of practices better by gathering the point of view of the teachers. Results show that regulations are gestures typical of the education of Physical Education. However, behaviors of lesser and not regulation are bet in days and analyzed. Besides, phenomena in link with knowledge are represented (ousting, masking, disappearing). If noticed practices are partly inherent in Physical Education teaching, they are not that the fruit of subjugation. According to their experiments and according their distinctive identities, the teachers rejected, put distance it the gestures of regulations, or, contrariwise, inserted them into their scholarship of teaching. All felt and still feel inherent difficulties in regulation. All have no same means to make face, nor the same will there to feel there efficient.
189

The Relationship Between Urban Middle School Physical Education Teachers’ Attitudes Toward Fitness Testing and Student Performance on Fitness Tests

Fredrick, Ray Noble January 2019 (has links)
Quality physical education is important to adolescent health and physical well-being. For urban schools, contextual and environmental constraints often make school-based physical education challenging. A good fitness testing program has the potential to promote physical activity and fitness. Attitude theory posits that attitude influences how teachers do their work. The purpose of this study was to investigate the attitudes of urban middle school physical education teachers toward physical fitness tests and their relationship with student performance on fitness tests. Middle school teachers (N = 124) were recruited from urban school districts on the east and west coasts of the United States. They completed the Physical Education Teacher Attitudes toward Fitness Tests instrument (Keating & Silverman, 2004) whose scores have been validated and also provided demographic information. Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics for overall teacher attitude and teacher attitude subdomains and correlational statistics to examine the relationship between each component of teacher attitude (overall, affective, and cognitive) and the percentage of students in the Healthy Fitness Zone (HFZ) on various components of the FITNESSGRAM. Correlations also were examined by various teacher demographic variables and for boys and girls. Univariate and multivariate analyses were conducted to examine the differences in fitness tests performance variables by demographic and profession-related variables. Teachers’ overall attitudes toward fitness testing were just higher than neutral, signaling positive attitudes. Among the findings, the affective subdomain of teachers’ attitude on the enjoyment of using fitness tests results was found to have a significant positive relationship with the percentage of students in the HFZ for the push-up test. Additional significant positive relationships between the percentage of students in the HFZ on the tests and various components of attitude were also found for girls. The findings suggest that teachers’ affective attitude may have a relationship with students’ performance on fitness tests and that relationships may be different for boys and girls. The relationships for teachers’ attitude toward enjoyment of using fitness tests results suggests teachers may use them to design activities and lessons that lead students to engage in more physical activity and thus improve their levels of fitness.
190

Decision making of physical education teachers: a case study of a Hong Kong primary school

Leung, Pak-wai, Ashley., 梁柏偉. January 2002 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Education / Master / Master of Education

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