This book assesses the landscape of physical education today and the
issues that shape it as a curriculum subject, particularly in the era of
COVID-19. It explores the processes of transformation and change that
follow government policy and considers what this means for physical
education practitioners in schools.
The book covers a wide range of important issues, across
(micro-)political, social-cultural, historical and post-modernist
categories. Bringing together current research with autobiographical and
anecdotal reflections on the realities of PE teaching, it considers the
significance of issues such as the emphasis on competitive sport in
schools, the socialization of teachers, the influence of politics and
policy on the classroom, colonization and decolonization of the
curriculum, digital technologies, the health and well-being agenda and
the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Offering a unique set of critical perspectives on physical education
today, this book is essential reading for any physical education course,
for all teacher training programmes with a PE track and for all
practising teachers, teacher educators or policy-makers with a
professional interest in PE.