47 results on '"Luguetti, Carla"'
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2. Pedagogies Implemented with Young People with Refugee Backgrounds in Physical Education and Sport: A Critical Review of the Literature
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Hudson, Christopher, Luguetti, Carla, and Spaaij, Ramon
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The field of physical education (PE), sport, and forced migration studies has grown considerably in recent years. Although we have seen an increase in publications in the field, no reviews of pedagogies regarding people with refugee backgrounds in PE and sport have been published to date. The purpose of this review is to critically examine pedagogies implemented with young people with refugee backgrounds in PE and sport. Using Freirean critical pedagogy as an analytical lens, we identified two themes: (a) the need to overcome cultural deficit perspectives by engaging in dialogue with the young people and (b) the need to move from assimilationist to co-designed ways of working with the young people in PE and sport. We outline directions and critical challenges for future research on the relationship between young people with refugee backgrounds and pedagogies implemented in PE and sport.
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- 2023
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3. 'I Know How Researchers Are […] Taking More from You than They Give You': Tensions and Possibilities of Youth Participatory Action Research in Sport for Development
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Luguetti, Carla, Jice, Nyayoud, Singehebhuye, Loy, Singehebhuye, Kashindi, Mathieu, Adut, and Spaaij, Ramón
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Critical scholarship in sport for development (SfD) advocates transformative research to disrupt the historical colonising view of sport as a vehicle to acculturate people into the values and norms of dominant Western culture. Youth participatory action research (YPAR) involves youth throughout the research process and consequently has the potential to challenge hegemonic forms of knowledge production in SfD. In reality, however, authentic engagement of co-researchers in the research process is often largely confined to data collection. This article draws on the decolonising lens as a theoretical framework to examine tensions, possibilities, and power relations that researchers and co-researchers encounter when co-designing and implementing YPAR in SfD. The project comprised a sixteen-week YPAR in a community-based football programme in Melbourne, Australia. Data collection comprised weekly collaborative meetings, observations collected as field notes, artefacts produced by participants, interviews, and reflective meetings. Findings centred on three themes: (a) finding sensitive ways to navigate the tensions of building trust and rapport; (b) negotiating the struggle between the co-researchers and the coaches about the use of space within the sport context; and (c) the challenges of relinquishing power in research and knowledge production, as reflected in our collective struggle to communicate to participants the value of YPAR for themselves and their communities. The findings challenge a romantic view that YPAR is guaranteed to be an empowering experience for young people; instead, they foreground the complexities and messiness of the process of sharing power with co-researchers in SfD. We conclude by advocating for critical, reflexive YPAR with explicit social transformation objectives to work toward the co-production of knowledge with young people.
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- 2023
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4. Rethinking Pedagogical Practices with Care-Experienced Young People: Lessons from a Sport-Based Programme Analysed through a Freirean Lens
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Quarmby, Thomas and Luguetti, Carla
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Background: Several studies demonstrate the benefits of socially critical work in sport pedagogy, which value young people's strengths, capabilities, knowledge, and resources. This body of research argues that young people have the agency to analyse their social contexts and to negotiate the forces that impede their choice of possibilities. While advocacy for a more transformative education process through sport has grown over the years, there is little research that aims to explore pedagogical practices with care-experienced young people (e.g. those who have been removed from their families and placed in the care of the 'state'). Purpose: This article draws on Paulo Freire's critical pedagogy as a theoretical framework to examine pedagogical practices with care-experienced young people in a sport-based programme. Participants and settings: This case study took place at a football-in-the-community programme in the West Midlands region of England, which aimed to develop the skills necessary to support care-experienced young people's transition from primary to secondary school. Participants included eight key adult stakeholders involved with the delivery, and ten care-experienced young people. Data collection/analysis: The research was conducted in two phases to understand the specific pedagogic practices employed within the programme. In the first phase, all adult participants took part in semi-structured interviews designed around their understanding of the programme and their perceptions about what care-experienced young people gained from it and why. For the second phase, observations of the programme were employed as well as a variety of participatory methods with young people such as drawings, mind mapping and photo-elicitation. Findings: The analysis resulted in the identification of three key themes relating to pedagogic practices: (1) problem-based learning with spaces of freedom; (2) contextualised learning activities; and (3) developing mutual trust and respect. By critically analysing a sport-based programme, this paper highlights how specific pedagogic practices might create spaces for empowering care-experienced young people, and the challenges and tensions in this process. Implications: We conclude by outlining how a Freirean critical pedagogy could be better utilised for care-experienced young people within sport-based programmes, in order to recognise their knowledge in naming, critiquing and negotiating barriers to their engagement in their sport context.
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- 2023
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5. Learning Communities and Physical Education Professional Development: A Scoping Review
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Parker, Melissa, Patton, Kevin, Gonçalves, Luiza, Luguetti, Carla, and Lee, Okseon
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Learning communities (LCs) in a variety of formats are touted as an effective strategy for continuing professional development (CPD) in physical education. This study's purpose was to provide an overview of the research on LCs in physical education for professional development between 1990 and 2020. A scoping review undergirded the research process and search parameters included full-text empirical studies in 12 languages. Ultimately 95 studies were found. A descriptive analysis revealed teachers as the focus in 75% of the studies; fewer studies focused on initial teacher education students, teacher educators, and facilitators. The largely qualitative studies reflected an international database (18 countries; four multinational studies) with South Korea, the US, and England dominating the literature. Four features spotlight thematic findings: (a) facilitation, (b) the process of community development, (c) the focus of the group and (d) the product(s) of the group. Learning communities as a CPD approach in physical education appear to be effective in a variety of ways. Little evidence, however, exists regarding their sustained nature over time, or how teacher engagement in LCs may result in substantive student learning. Contributing to the scattered nature of literature to date was the interchangeable use of communities of practice (CoP) and other forms of LCs. Often communities were not theoretically aligned, the development process of communities not explained, nor evidence provided as to how the community studied contained the qualifying features of a CoP or LCs. Future research, therefore, should detail the nature of community and fidelity to the theoretical framework.
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- 2022
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6. The (Im)Possibilities of Praxis in Online Health and Physical Education Teacher Education
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Luguetti, Carla, Enright, Eimear, Hynes, Jack, and Bishara, Jeffrey Anthony
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Over the past three decades, a body of research has highlighted the benefits and challenges of what might collectively be referred to as critical pedagogical approaches to Health and Physical Education Teacher Education (HPETE). This research shows that praxis facilitated through critical pedagogies can challenge dominant accountability regimes in HPETE, by animating the discourse of democracy and interrogating and denaturalizing the conditions of oppression. The aim of this study was to explore the (im)possibilities of praxis when the lead author attempted to transition to online teaching. Theoretically, we are guided by the work of bell hooks, and specifically her 'engaged pedagogy'. Participatory action research framed this study. Participants included the lead author (a teacher educator), a critical friend, and two additional teacher educators. Data collected included: (a) lead researcher observations; (b) collaborative group meetings between the lead author and the two other teacher educators; (c) meetings between the lead author and the critical friend; (d) teacher educator focus group; and (e) artefacts. Findings are discussed under two themes. First, "building relationships as a foundation to cultivating a learning community"; this theme relates to the challenges and facilitators to getting to know our 'faceless students' and building an interactive relationship with them in an online environment. The second theme constructed from the data was "commitment to a process of self-actualization that promotes teachers' and students' wellbeing"; under this theme we describe and interrogate how mutual participation, vulnerability and risk taking were cultivated in challenging university and pedagogical contexts.
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- 2022
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7. 'The Teacher Makes Us Feel Like We Are a Family': Students from Refugee Backgrounds' Perceptions of Physical Education in Swedish Schools
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Cseplö, Erica, Wagnsson, Stefan, Luguetti, Carla, and Spaaij, Ramón
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Background: Over the past five decades, the number of people from refugee backgrounds in developed countries has been on the constant rise. Although the field of refugee and forced migration studies in relation to education and sport has grown considerably in recent years, very little is known about refugee-background students' perceptions of Physical Education (PE).Purpose: The aim of this study was to investigate refugee-background students' perceptions of PE in Swedish high schools, using a salutogenic approach. Participants and settings: This qualitative study was conducted in two Swedish high schools and involved eleven students from refugee backgrounds aged 16-18 years (seven boys and four girls) who originated from a variety of countries including Afghanistan, Syria, Somalia, Ethiopia and Albania. Data collection/analysis: A total of 11 semi-structured interviews were conducted, and the interviews were systematically coded and analyzed using the sense of coherence (SOC) components as analytical tools. Findings: Three themes were identified that captured the students' perceptions and experiences: (1) PE was perceived as more meaningful in Sweden than in their country of origin due to short-term benefits (e.g. social interaction with friends, and improving personal health and wellbeing) and long-term benefits (e.g. learning for the future); (2) understanding the rules and purpose of the activities helped students to better comprehend the experiences acquired in PE and communicate with others; and (3) constructive social relationships with teachers and classmates were an essential resource in order to make PE manageable. Implications: We suggest that strengths-based approaches should be recognized and incorporated into PE in order to facilitate health promoting factors and wellbeing among students from refugee backgrounds.
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- 2022
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8. 'We United to Defend Ourselves and Face Our Struggles': Nurturing a Physical Education Teachers' Community of Practice in a Precarious Context
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Gonçalves, Luiza, Parker, Melissa, Luguetti, Carla, and Carbinatto, Michele
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Background: Physical Education (PE) teachers around the world often struggle with different experiences of precarity such as job insecurity, high workloads, lack of infrastructure in schools, and others. Communities of practice (CoP) are recognised as an important democratic strategy for teachers' continuing professional development (CPD). A democratic CoP seeks to promote spaces where teachers can empower themselves by taking risks and collectively struggle to overcome their challenges. The majority of studies regarding CoPs and PE have, however, been conducted in privileged, global north countries with PE teachers who were predominantly white and middle-class. Much less attention has been paid to critically examining PE-CoPs with teachers in precarious contexts in the global south countries. Purpose: This study investigated the process of nurturing a democratic PE-CoP in a precarious, Brazilian school context. Methods: Ethnography and action research framed this 2-semester study. Participants included six PE teachers, a facilitator, and a critical friend. Data collection/analysis: Data sources included: (a) lead researcher observations collected as field notes; (b) weekly teachers' meetings and researchers' meetings; and (c) teachers' interviews. Data were analysed using an inductive and iterative thematic process. Findings: Results indicated the development of a democratic PE-CoP in a precarious situation through an ongoing and dynamic progression where teachers built their own practice to overcome the marginalisation of PE and were supported to exist. In this untenable context, the nurturing of a democratic CoP focused on teachers' survival and 'defending themselves' while learning to struggle together to change their micro-context. Implications: Nurturing a democratic CoP created a space for the negotiation of what was meaningful and useful for these teachers in their reality. In these contexts, we suggest that teachers' CPD must include not only content knowledge but also the quest for better professional conditions.
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- 2022
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9. Towards a Culturally Relevant Sport Pedagogy: Lessons Learned from African Australian Refugee-Background Coaches in Grassroots Football
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Luguetti, Carla, Singehebhuye, Loy, and Spaaij, Ramón
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There is a body of research that indicates the need for community-driven and culturally responsive pedagogies in sport-based interventions. There is much to learn from the pedagogical approaches and experiences of African Australian refugee-background coaches who work with refugee-background young people toward acceptance and affirmation of their cultural and racial identities. This paper explores African Australian refugee-background coaches' pedagogies in working with African Australian refugee-background young people in a grassroots football programme in Melbourne. Participants included an African Australian refugee-background young woman and four coaches. Data collection spanned a six-month period and included observations and semi-structured interviews. The findings were analysed using Ladson-Billings' [Ladson-Billings, G. (1995b). Toward a theory of culturally relevant pedagogy. "American Educational Research Journal," 32(3), 465-491. https://doi.org/10.3102/00028312032003465; Ladson-Billings, G. (2009). "The dreamkeepers?: Successful teachers of African American children." Jossey-Bass Publishers; Ladson-Billings, G. (2014). Culturally relevant pedagogy 2.0: A.k.a. The Remix. "Harvard Educational Review," 84(1), 74-84. https://doi.org/10.17763/haer.84.1.p2rj131485484751] conceptualisation of Culturally Relevant Pedagogy. The study identified three main themes. First, the coaches considered themselves 'barrier breakers': they were able to connect the African Australian refugee-background young people to different resources in and outside of sports contexts to develop their success in football and in life. Second, the coaches considered the sport programme 'a family' where they were willing to nurture and support cultural competence by sharing power with the participants and their community. Third, the coaches created spaces for young people to develop awareness that allowed them to critique some of the social inequities experienced. Future studies should continue to move beyond a focus on predominantly white and middle-class providers and coaches in sport-based interventions. By including and foregrounding the voices of coaches who have diverse experiences, more diverse cultural knowledges are validated, enabling the translation of this knowledge into more culturally responsive sport programmes.
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- 2022
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10. Feminists against Fad, Fizz Ed: A Poetic Commentary Exploring the Notion of Joe Wicks 'as' Physical Education
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Lambert, Karen, Luguetti, Carla, and Lynch, Shrehan
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Introduction: Even though advocacy for poststructural feminist lenses to change/challenge physical education (PE) has grown over the years, there is an evident gap in qualitative research using poetic forms of representation in PE. Purpose: The purpose of this study was to use a poststructural feminist framework to challenge a particular kind of hegemonic reproduction of PE, particularly to explore the notion of 'Joe Wicks "as" PE'. Participants and settings: Collaborative autoethnography framed this study and participants included three queer leaning female-identified early/mid-career PE teacher educators. Data collection/analysis: Over the course of eight weeks, we collected and generated a variety of texts individually and collectively. To capture our reactions, we decided to collect data around two 'prompts', namely the recorded podcast titled 'Is Joe Wicks the face of PE?' of an Association Internationale des Écoles Supérieures d'Éducation Physique (AIESEP) hosted chat, and our participation in a 9 am 'PE with Joe' session. We presented the data gathered in this project poetically. Findings: We divided the findings into two parts corresponding with our responses (collaborative autoethnographies) to the two themes, namely 'We can't fix this/that' (aka 'Banging our heads against a brick wall') and 'Joe Wicks as PE' (aka 'Feminist killjoys'). Implications: We believe that a poetic representation, in addition to nurturing and amplifying the emotional and lyrical data collected, presented an opportunity to contribute to, and extends this kind of representational style in PE. In addition to this, collaborative autoethnography allowed us as a community to advance scholarship and provides a space for collective empowerment.
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- 2022
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11. The Facilitator's Role in Supporting Physical Education Teachers' Empowerment in a Professional Learning Community
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Gonçalves, Luiza Lana, Parker, Melissa, Luguetti, Carla, and Carbinatto, Michele
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Physical education (PE) researchers demonstrate the benefits of collaborative continuing professional development (CPD) through the cultivation of professional learning communities (PLCs). Furthermore, this body of research reflects teachers' empowerment as a current concern in the literature about PLCs. Although the importance of teachers' empowerment in PLCs is recognised, there is much to learn about the facilitator's actions to create spaces for empowerment. The purpose of this paper is to explore the facilitator's actions in supporting PE teachers' empowerment in a PLC. Action research framed this project in Brazil. Participants included six PE teachers, a facilitator, and a critical friend. Data sources included daily observations and reflections from weekly meetings with the teachers and the critical friend. Data were analysed using inductive and thematic methods. By engaging a Freirean view as a theoretical framework, it was understood that the teachers needed to empower themselves to survive in their reality, learn in order to be recognised at school, and act to change their micro-context. Accordingly, three themes represented the facilitator's actions to support teachers' empowerment: (a) creating a horizontal relationship with teachers through dialogue; (b) understanding and respecting teachers' learning and (c) struggling with teachers in their reality as an act of solidarity. These facilitator actions contributed primarily to building a democratic space where the teachers could name, critique and negotiate the barriers they faced. Although creating spaces for teachers' empowerment provided the opportunity for improving teachers' PE knowledge, these spaces fundamentally supported teachers in seeking better professional conditions, organising themselves as a community and pursuing social change.
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- 2022
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12. Facilitation as an Act of Love: A Self-Study of How a Facilitator's Pedagogy Changed over Time in the Process of Supporting a Community of Learners
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Luguetti, Carla, Oliver, Kimberly L., and Parker, Melissa
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Purpose: This study aims to understand how a facilitator's pedagogy changed over time in the process of supporting a community of learners to teach using an activist sport approach. Methods: Self-study framed this four-semester research project. Participants included the lead author, two critical friends, 10 preservice teachers, and 110 youth. Data collected included lead researcher's field notes and debriefing meetings between the lead author and the two critical friends. Results: Findings identified the facilitator's: (a) struggles to create a democratic learning space in a university context, (b) discomfort with giving up control and allowing for various degrees of preservice teachers' engagement, and (c) negotiation of feeling of saudade (the love that remains after someone is gone) while creating a group identity. Discussion/Conclusion: A pedagogy of facilitation as an act of love offers genuine possibilities for decolonizing and reinventing reality by naming, critiquing, and challenging/negotiating forms of oppression.
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- 2021
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13. A Transformative Learning Journey of a Teacher Educator in Enacting an Activist Approach in Physical Education Teacher Education
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Luguetti, Carla and Oliver, Kimberly L.
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Over the past decades, a body of scholarship has highlighted the benefits of an activist approach in Physical Education Teacher Education (PETE). This body of research shows that an activist approach enables teacher educators, student teachers and young people to work together in order to become conscious of the power structures in society that lead to social inequities. Although we have a body of research on social justice and critical pedagogy in PETE, there is much to learn about physical education teacher educators' learning journeys in enacting activist approaches. By using a critical autoethnography approach, this study explores a transformative learning journey experienced by the lead author in enacting an activist approach based on young people's voices. The PETE educator's learning journey emerged from the reflexive process in the last 8 years with the second author. A critical theoretical framework based on critical pedagogy and feminist studies is employed to discuss the transformative learning journey presented in this paper. By establishing a collective meaning, we aim to provide rich instances of critical pedagogies that add to the project of identifying various approaches to social justice in PETE contexts. This is a relevant story to PETE practitioners who might be attempting to take a critical stance in contemporary university contexts.
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- 2021
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14. Exploring practitioner inquiry among health and physical education teachers: insights from teachers’ perspectives.
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Luguetti, Carla, Alfrey, L., Hudson, C., and Brown, C.
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HEALTH education teachers , *CAREER development , *PHYSICAL education teachers , *PROFESSIONAL employee training , *TEACHER researchers - Abstract
Introduction : Existing research suggests that practitioner inquiry (PI) can positively influence teachers’ professional learning. Within the context of Health and Physical Education (HPE), however, we know little about the influence of PI on HPE teachers and their students, and HPE colleagues.Aim : This study responds to the research question: in what ways do HPE teachers believe that PI influences their teaching practices, their students and their HPE colleagues?Context and participants: This study presents a case study of a year-long, government-funded teacher professional learning programme called Teaching Excellence Program (TEP) offered by the Victorian Academy of Teaching and Leadership. The TEP is intended to advance teacher professional knowledge in a range of ways, including through individual and collaborative PIs. This paper examines the outcomes that ensued from the teachers’ individual and collaborative PIs. The study involved seven Australian HPE teachers with varying levels of experience (6–30 years). We employed an exploratory, multi-method case study approach, and data consisted of interview transcript, participant-designed cartoons, and artefacts (e.g. framing a problem of practice and action planning documentation).Findings: Within the broader context of the TEP, PI was identified as particularly engaging for the participating HPE teachers. The HPE teachers believed that engaging in PI: (a) enhanced their own teaching practices; (b) therefore improved students’ engagement; and in some cases (c) influenced HPE colleagues’ teaching practice.Implications: This study underscores the potential influence that PI can have on HPE teachers when scaffolded and sustained support is available and accessed. Furthermore, this study highlights the significance of adopting the concept ofinquiry as stance , emphasizing the role of teachers as researchers. Positioned as teacher-researchers, they generate localized knowledge, reimagine and theorize their own and potentially others’ practice, and critically engage with the theories and research of others. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2025
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15. 'Sitting there and listening was one of the most important lessons I had to learn': critical capacity building in youth participatory action research.
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Luguetti, Carla, Jice, Nyayoud, Singehebhuye, Loy, Singehebhuye, Kashindi, Mathieu, Adut, and Spaaij, Ramón
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YOUNG adults , *YOUTH development , *COMMUNITY-based participatory research , *CAPACITY building , *PROCESS capability , *YOUNG women - Abstract
This work builds upon critical youth studies' concern with capacity building in engaging young people as active agents for social change. This article analyses critical capacity building processes among young women engaged in youth participatory action research (YPAR) that sought to co-design a community sport programme in Melbourne, Australia. Participants included the first author, four young women (second to the fifth author), and a critical friend (sixth author). The experience of engaging young women in YPAR foregrounded significant capacity building such as: (a) learning to genuinely listen to young people in order to plan for change; (b) finding creative and flexible ways to build relationships; (c) learning to negotiate the messiness and uncertainty in the research process; and (d) improving problem-solving skills in order to listen and respond to young people in their community. This paper concludes by articulating how YPAR can potentialise the development of critical capacity building in youth studies, nurturing skills and knowledge linked with social justice, activism, and democracy, instead of instrumentalist and technocratic capacity-building models that focus on training and predefined practical skills. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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16. "Everybody's talking about doing co-design, but to really truly genuinely authentically do it [...] it's bloody hard": Radical openness in youth participatory action research.
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Luguetti, Carla, Ryan, Juliana, Eckersley, Bill, Howard, Amy, Craig, Sarah, and Brown, Claire
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- 2024
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17. DESENVOLVIMENTO DE ATLETAS TALENTOSAS DO FUTEBOL FEMININO /Development of talented women's football athletes
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Schmidt, Rodrigo, Massa, Marcelo, Luguetti, Carla Nascimento, Bohme, Maria Tereza Silveira, Monteiro, Carlos Bandeira de Mello, and Nicolai Re, Alessandro H.
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- 2022
18. 'Am I an Easy Unit?' Challenges of Being and Becoming an Activist Teacher Educator in a Neoliberal Australian Context
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Luguetti, Carla and McLachlan, Fiona
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Over the past decades, a body of scholarship has highlighted the possibilities of critical pedagogies in Health and Physical Education Teacher Education (HPETE) (Fitzpatrick, 2018. What happened to critical pedagogy in physical education? An analysis of key critical work in the field. "European Physical Education Review," 1-18; O'Sullivan, 2018. PETE academics as public intellectuals and activists in a global teacher education context. "Physical Education and Sport Pedagogy," 23(5), 536-543; Walton-Fisette & Sutherland, 2018. Moving forward with social justice education in physical education teacher education. "Physical Education and Sport Pedagogy," 23(5), 461-468). Although we have a body of research on social justice and critical pedagogy in HPETE, there is much to learn about the challenges activist teacher educators face in the process of being and becoming activists, especially in neoliberal contexts. This collaborative self-study explores the challenges of being and becoming an activist teacher educator in a neoliberal Australian context and how those challenges were negotiated. Participants included the lead researcher and a critical friend. Data collected included: (a) lead researcher observations collected as field notes; (b) lead researcher reflective diaries after each teaching episode; (c) meetings between the lead researcher and the critical friend; (d) material produced in the lead researcher's classes. Data analysis involved induction and constant comparison. The lead author faced internal and external challenges. First, the lead author had to negotiate her struggles to share power with students. The teacher educator started to be seen as a 'very cool person', teaching 'an easy unit'. Second, the teacher educator struggled to understand the complexities of teaching in a neoliberal context. The teacher educator [with the help of the critical friend] negotiated those challenges by understanding the importance to set expectations for learning within an activist approach and understanding the power of activist approaches to challenge a neoliberal system. Future studies should continue to explore the challenges activist teacher educators face in a context where students are socialized in neoliberal context, and educator's performance is measured in the same system.
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- 2021
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19. Social Justice Narratives in Academia: Challenges, Struggles and Pleasures PETE Educators Face in Understanding and Enacting Critical Pedagogy in Brazil
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Knijnik, Jorge and Luguetti, Carla
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Research demonstrates the benefits of educating for social justice in Physical Education Teacher Education (PETE) programs. This body of research shows that social justice pedagogy enables student teachers to create a sense of social agency and community purpose in their teaching that positions them with more certainty when facing the political and professional hurdles embedded in a teaching career. The social justice perspective allows PETE educators and student teachers to work together in order to become conscious of the power structures in society that lead to social inequities. Although there are comprehensive studies on social justice and critical pedagogy in PETE, there is much to learn about how PETE educators conceptualize and practice critical pedagogy. Particularly in Brazil, there is limited research that confronts and analyses data from the myriad of emancipatory pedagogical PETE practices around the country, in order to turn those practices into a coherent body of critical narratives and shared knowledge. The purpose of this paper is therefore to explore the challenges, struggles and pleasures that two PETE educators faced in understanding and enacting critical pedagogy in Brazil. A theoretical framework based on Freire's critical pedagogy is employed to discuss the complementary narratives presented in this paper. We proclaim our hope that critical pedagogy might point to some avenues for political democratic struggles in a moment when public Education in Brazil is under severe attack promoted by the right-wing forces that currently sit on the presidential and the ministry of Education chairs.
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- 2021
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20. Nurturing Solidarity: Considering the Internationalization of Research Activities in Kinesiology as a Moral Practice
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MacPhail, Ann and Luguetti, Carla
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There is a growing interest in the internationalization of research activities in higher education institutions. Economic and political motivations are increasingly the key drivers for internationalization which might be viewed as disruptive and insensitive to local contexts, fostering inequality and forms of cultural and socioeconomic imperialism. Unlike this reductionist view of internationalization, we argue that internationalization should be considered a moral practice grounded in solidarity as a key concept to transform the social and material conditions of inequality. It is a solidarity based on sharing the struggle with people, and the will to give, and rethink, ourselves. The aim of this study is to explore the challenges experienced by an academic as she attempts to increase the internationalization of research activities in kinesiology through related research, journals, and academic associations. A critical theoretical framework, based on Freire's notion of solidarity, encourages the reader to interrogate the way in which they strive toward contributing to the internationalization of research activities in kinesiology. It is suggested that solidarity might direct readers to consider internationalization as the promotion of cooperation among nations and, in turn, improving the quality and relevance of research.
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- 2021
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21. 'I Always Live in a 'quebrada' [Favela] and Today I Am Here. So, You Can Be Also Here One Day': Exploring Pre-Service Teachers' Perceptions of Love for Youth from Socially Vulnerable Backgrounds
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Luguetti, Carla and McDonald, Brent
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In recent years, socially critical scholars have argued that love, as a moral basis for socio-critical work, should not be colorblind or power blind and that marginalized populations may understand caring within their sociocultural context, creating spaces for youth and teachers to challenge the racism, sexism, class exploitation and linguicism imposed on their communities. While there is advocacy of love in education and physical education, there is little research that aims to explore how pre-service teachers' (PSTs') conceptions change across time. The aim of this study was to explore PSTs' changing perceptions of love as they worked in an activist sport project with youth from socially vulnerable backgrounds. Participatory action research framed this four-semester research project. Participants included the lead researcher, four PSTs and 110 youth. Data collected included the following: (a) the lead researcher's field notes; (b) collaborative PSTs' group meetings; (c) PSTs' generated artifacts; and (d) PSTs' focus groups and interviews. Data analysis involved induction and constant comparison. The PSTs understood that love was represented by the following: (a) creating democratic spaces for students to care for each other and their community; (b) trusting and understanding the students, and dreaming possible futures with them; (c) being the best teacher in order to facilitate students' learning; and (d) making sure all students are included. We concluded that the PSTs' embodied experiences of oppression and the reflexive experience lived in the activist approach created a space for the PSTs to see themselves in the youth, reconnect with their own identity and develop empathy and love for the diverse youth.
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- 2020
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22. 'I Became a Teacher That Respects the Kids' Voices': Challenges and Facilitators Pre-Service Teachers Faced in Learning an Activist Approach
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Luguetti, Carla and Oliver, Kimberly L.
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Several studies demonstrate the benefits of educating for social justice in physical education teacher education programs [O'Sullivan, M. (2018). PETE Academics as public intellectuals and activists in a global teacher education context. "Physical Education and Sport Pedagogy," 23(5), 536-543], which supports that pre-service teachers (PSTs) have the capacity to be active agents of change. In working with social justice, PSTs engage in what can be a very personal struggle with their own stereotypes and assumptions about the people they are working with [Oliver, K. L., Oesterreich, H. A., Aranda, R., Archeleta, J., Blazera, C., Crux, K., … Robinson, R. (2015). 'The sweetness of struggle': Innovation in physical education teacher education through student-centered inquiry as curriculum in a physical education methods course. "Physical Education and Sport Pedagogy," 20(1), 97-115]. Although the challenges that PSTs faced to learn an activist approach to teaching are described in the literature, there is little research that aims to understand how these challenges progress across time. The aim of this study is to explore the challenges pre-service teachers faced when learning to use an activist approach across time. Participatory action research framed this 3-semester study (18 months). Participants included 10 pre-service-teachers, 90 youth, and two researchers. Data collected included: (a) collaborative PSTs group meetings; (b) PSTs reflective diaries after each teaching episode; (c) lead researcher observations collected as field notes; (d) PSTs generated artifacts; and (e) PSTs interviews and focus groups. Data analysis involved inductive and constant comparison. Results conveyed: (a) the PSTs' assumptions about what student-centered pedagogy meant and the challenges of overcoming their misconceptions about teaching and learning; and (b) the PST's struggles in coming to understand themselves as activist teachers, with dispositions as advocates of social justice. Future studies should continue to explore the challenges and facilitators PSTs face when learning an activist approach aimed at empowering both students and teachers to develop a critically conscious understanding of their relationships with the world through their effort to name and change the world together.
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- 2020
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23. The Complexity, Tensions and Struggles in Developing Learning Communities throughout a Sport Education Season
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Luguetti, Carla, Lopes, Priscila, Sobrinho, Diego Rodrigues de Souza, Carbinatto, Michele Viviene, and MacPhail, Ann
- Abstract
Several studies demonstrate that Sport Education (SE) supports the development of an authentic sport experience. However, the 'messiness' attached to the reality of effectively enacting SE is less prominent in the literature. The aim of this study is therefore to capture the complexity, tensions and struggles (for both lecturers and undergraduate students) of delivering and experiencing an authentic Artistic Gymnastics (AG) SE season within learning communities. Action research framed this 13-week study. Participants included 33 undergraduate students, four lecturers (one experienced in SE and three experienced in AG) at a university in Brazil and a professor with expertise in teaching and researching SE who was contacted regularly throughout the SE season. Data were collected weekly and included: (a) weekly collaborative lecture group meetings after each class; (b) student reflective diaries; (c) lead lecturer weekly observations collected as field notes; (d) Facebook posts; and (e) student focus groups. Data analysis involved inductive process and constant comparison. Results conveyed: (a) the relationship of trust and interdependence between the lecturers who implemented SE; (b) how students created a safe environment that allowed them to overcome fear; and (c) how lecturers and students negotiated the different levels of students' engagement during the season and the associated feeling of frustration. Lecturers and students developed into two separate communities of learners. Future studies should continue to examine the effectiveness of a community of learners within the SE context and specifically encourage lecturers and students to work together as one learning community, learning from, and with, each other.
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- 2019
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24. Exploring teacher educator pedagogical decision-making about a combined pedagogy of social justice and meaningful physical education.
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Ní Chróinín, Déirdre, Iannucci, Cassandra, Luguetti, Carla, and Hamblin, Declan
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TEACHER educators ,SOCIAL justice education ,PHYSICAL education ,CURRICULUM ,DECISION making - Abstract
Teacher educators shape curriculum in the pedagogical decisions they make (Lunenberg et al., 2007). Yet, evidence is lacking about how physical education (PE) teacher educators make decisions about what to include in their teacher education pedagogies. Four teacher educators in four different PE teacher education (PETE) programmes collaborated to examine their decision-making as they explored ideas related to Meaningful PE and social justice pedagogies. Insight into how teacher educators make decisions can add nuance to understanding pedagogical decision-making in PETE. A self-study of teacher education practices frame supported collective and individual interrogation of our decision-making processes. Data included planning documentation for each teaching episode (n = 42), individual reflections (n = 33), recordings of conversations with critical friends (n = 15), and recordings of collective meetings (n = 8). Pedagogical confrontations (Moran et al., 2019) provided a lens for each teacher educator to gain perspective and insight into their decision-making related to Meaningful PE and social justice pedagogies The findings are presented in the form of four individual cases that illustrate the distinct story of each teacher educator's engagement with Meaningful PE and social justice pedagogies. Teacher educators' decisions were guided by their purposes and influenced by their contexts. Additionally, peers were an important source of pedagogical confrontations to influence decision-making practices. This research contributes to the understanding of innovation in PETE by illustrating how clarity about priorities promotes deliberate decision-making by teacher educators resulting in adoption or rejection of innovation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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25. 'It wasn't adults and young people [...] we're all in it together': co-designing a post-secondary transition program through youth participatory action research.
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Luguetti, Carla, Ryan, Juliana, Eckersley, Bill, Howard, Amy, Buck, Sarah, Osman, Aisha, Hansen, Chloe, Galati, Patrick, Cahill, Robinson Jack, Craig, Sarah, and Brown, Claire
- Subjects
- *
SECONDARY schools , *CRITICAL consciousness , *COLLABORATIONISTS (Traitors) , *EMOTIONS , *CLINICAL trials - Abstract
This paper aims to contribute fresh insights into youth participatory action research (YPAR) by using bell hooks' engaged pedagogy to illuminate the process of co-designing a program for transition beyond secondary school. Engaged pedagogy is a critical pedagogy that combines critical consciousness and radical wholeness and seeks to foster a learning community. The 10-week YPAR included six staff collaborators (SCs) and five youth collaborators (YCs). Data comprised recordings of weekly collaborative group meetings; group interviews with SCs and YCs; and reflections and artefacts such as planning documents, graphic organisers and photographs. Informed by engaged pedagogy, findings are represented in two themes. First, YCs and SCs raised critical consciousness by collectively unpacking and critiquing the concept of transition. Critical consciousness allowed YCs to share their lived experiences and critique the dominant deficit discourse that represents transition as a linear process that needs to be smoothed by expert adults. Second, YCs and SCs demonstrated what hooks describes as radical wholeness, by bringing their whole selves to the YPAR. While some SCs and YCs struggled with the messiness of co-design as they negotiated expectations and roles, they learned to be honest and share their emotions, becoming what hooks describes as a learning community. Using an engaged pedagogy lens, we conclude by advocating for a holistic approach for YPAR in which educators take the risk of being vulnerable, sharing uncertainty and discomfort while encouraging youth to also take risks by bringing their whole selves to the process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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26. 'That Is Like a 24 Hours-Day Tournament!': Using Social Media to Further an Authentic Sport Experience within Sport Education
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Luguetti, Carla, Goodyear, Victoria Anne, and André, Mauro Henrique
- Abstract
Several studies demonstrate that Sport Education supports the development of an authentic experience of sport. Social media has the potential to further the development of an authentic sport experience since it is a key aspect of contemporary sport culture and can be a space for individuals to interact during the Sport Education. Yet the evidence-base on the use of social media within Sport Education is limited. The purpose of this study was to explore how social media supports the development of an authentic sport experience within Sport Education. The context of this study was within a female recreational community sport futsal club. Players engaged with Sport Education as a focus for their sessions for 13 weeks. The Sport Education season embedded the six key features. During the Sport Education season, players interacted with each other through Facebook. Data were generated from; (1) researcher/player field journal, (2) Facebook posts and (3) post-season player interviews. Data analysis involved inductive, constant comparison and member-checking methods. Results showed that players' uses of Facebook supported the development of an authentic sport experience. Players' uses of Facebook strengthened the development of three key Sport Education features; affiliation, festivity and season. Based on the limited amount of research on the impact of social media within Sport Education and community sport, future studies should continue to examine the effectiveness of social media as an interactional tool to enhance the development of an authentic sport experience.
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- 2019
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27. Towards a Pedagogy of Love: Exploring Pre-Service Teachers' and Youth's Experiences of an Activist Sport Pedagogical Model
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Luguetti, Carla, Kirk, D., and Oliver, K. L.
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Introduction: Several studies demonstrate the benefits of socially critical work in physical education and sport which value the importance of taking action intended for democracy, empowerment and critical reflection [Devis-devis, Jose. 2006. "Socially Critical Research Perspectives in Physical Education." In "The Handbook of Physical Education," edited by David Kirk, Doune MacDavid, and Mary O'Sullivan, Vol. 9, 37-58. London: Sage]. An 'ethic of care' has been proposed as a moral basis for socio-critical work, describing caring or love as being the basis for pedagogic dialogue and commitment to young people [Rovegno, Inez, and David Kirk. 1995. "Articulations and Silences in Socially Critical Work on Physical Education: Toward a Broader Agenda." "Quest (Grand Rapids, Mich)" 47 (4): 447-474]. Although we have a body of research on socially critical pedagogy in physical education and sport that highlights the importance of an ethic of care (e.g. Ennis, Catherine D. 1999. "Creating a Culturally Relevant Curriculum for Disengaged Girls." "Sport, Education and Society" 4: 31-49; Hellison, Don. 1978. "Beyond Balls and Bats." Washington: American Alliance for Health Physical], there is little research that aims to explore teachers' and youth's experiences in living this kind of pedagogy. Purpose: The aim of this study was to explore both pre-service teachers' and youth's experiences of an activist sport pedagogical model for working with youth from socially vulnerable backgrounds and to interrogate the way in which a pedagogy of love emerged. Participants and settings: Participatory action research framed this 3-semester study (18 months). Participants included 10 pre-service-teachers (PSTs), 90 youths and a researcher (the lead author). Data collection/analysis: Data collected included: (a) lead researcher observations collected as field notes; (b) collaborative PSTs group meetings; (c) PSTs' reflective diaries after each teaching episode; (d) PSTs and youth generated artefacts; and (e) PSTs and youth focus groups and interviews. Data analysis involved induction and constant comparison. Findings: A pedagogy of love emerged when we implemented the activist sport pedagogical model across three semesters in a socially vulnerable context with pre-service teachers and youth. First, a pedagogy of love involved repeatedly challenging inequities. Second, it valued solidarity thereby cultivating a learning community. Finally, it fostered hope and imagination in all participants in order to persevere despite barriers. Implications: We suggest that the activist sport approach could be considered a holistic approach in which teacher/coach and youth interact affectively [Hellison, Don. 1978. "Beyond Balls and Bats." Washington: American Alliance for Health Physical] and showed profound commitment to humanity, conscientization and pedagogic dialogue [Freire, Paulo. 2005. "Teachers as Cultural Workers: Letters to Those Who Dare Teach." Boulder, CO: Westview Press].
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- 2019
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28. Developing Teachers' Pedagogical Identities through a Community of Practice: Learning to Sustain the Use of a Student-Centered Inquiry as Curriculum Approach
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Luguetti, Carla, Aranda, Raquel, Nuñez Enriquez, Oscar, and Oliver, Kimberly L.
- Abstract
This collaborative self-study explores how educators' pedagogical identities developed in the process of learning to use a Student-Centered Inquiry as Curriculum (SCIC) approach in activity settings within a community of practice (CoP). Participants included a university professor, college instructor, postdoctoral student and doctoral student. Data included 16 weekly field notes and debriefings following observations, teacher artifacts, 16 weekly collaborative group meetings, and 3 90-minute interviews per teacher. Culture, values, beliefs and professional background were critical for the development of the teachers' pedagogical identities in the process of learning to use a SCIC approach within a community of practice. These experiences created for some, places to further develop their ideas about teaching, whereas for others they caused great discomfort and a sense of personal loss. The CoP facilitated the development of the teachers' pedagogical identities, changing positionalities, and negotiating culture, values, beliefs and professional backgrounds.
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- 2019
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29. What would bell hooks think of the remote teaching and learning in Physical Education during the COVID-19 pandemic? A critical review of the literature.
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Lambert, Karen, Hudson, Christopher, and Luguetti, Carla
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PHYSICAL education ,ONLINE education ,TRANSFORMATIVE learning ,PANDEMICS ,DISTANCE education ,TEACHING ,HOLISTIC education ,PHYSICAL education teacher education - Abstract
This critical narrative review draws on bell hooks' engaged pedagogy to examine the pedagogies deployed by PE teachers and PETE educators in response to COVID-19. Full-text, empirical studies between 2020 and 2022 were accessed through Academic Search Complete, Education Database (ProQuest), Education Research Complete (EBSCO), ERIC (EBSCO), Scopus, and SPORTDiscus. In total, 86 articles were considered for full-text review, with 38 articles moving to data extraction after having met the study's inclusion criteria. We used inductive and deductive methods of data analysis. Findings are reported and discussed according to (a) the inductive identification of pedagogies deployed by PE teachers and PETE educators during COVID-19; and (b) the deductive analysis of the literature using bell hooks' engaged pedagogy as a theoretical lens. This review determined that whilst the COVID-19 pandemic may have signalled an opportunity to advance an engaged pedagogical approach in PE and PETE, there was scant evidence of teachers or researchers choosing this path. Instead, innovation, criticality, creativity, mutuality, engagement and meaningful learning was suspended in favour of day-to-day survival. Most papers focused on remote learning enablers rather than engaged pedagogy; that is, they focused on the communication technologies required to connect to online spaces and then to teach within them. We outline directions and critical challenges for PE teachers and PETE educators to develop equitable, inclusive, and empathetic classroom spaces which seek to create learning that is transformative, dynamic and holistic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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30. Pre-service teachers' negotiation of meaning in their Physical Education Teacher Education programme: a two-year follow-up ethnography.
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Valério, Carla, Farias, Cláudio, Luguetti, Carla, and Mesquita, Isabel
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TRAINING of student teachers ,PHYSICAL education teachers ,COMMUNITIES of practice ,TEACHER development ,SOCIAL learning ,PROFESSIONAL education - Abstract
Research demonstrates the benefits of communities of practice (CoP) for teachers' professional learning in Physical Education (PE). However, much less is known about how CoPs can be used to understand pre-service teachers' (PSTs) professional learning in their Physical Education Teacher Education (PETE) programmes. Negotiation of meaning (NofM) is a crucial concept regarding learning inside of a CoP. Hence, understand how meaning is negotiated in initial teacher professional development might allow the enhancement of the social learning strategies in PETE programmes. This article draws on the CoP theoretical framework, and specifically the concept of NofM to understand how PSTs negotiated meaning during a two-year PETE programme. In particular, the focus is on the challenges faced by PSTs throughout the PETE social interactive process. The setting was a PETE programme in Portugal. In year one, the participants were three university teacher educators (TE) and 25 PSTs. In year two, the participants were three PSTs from year one who were in their school placement, a university supervisor (US) and one cooperating teacher (CT). This study was an ethnography with a two-year longitudinal design. Data were collected through the ethnographer's participant-observations (first author), meetings of the PSTs with the mentoring team (TEs, US, CT), and the ethnographer's field diary, reflexive log, and audio-recordings. Data analysis involved the constant-comparative grounded theory method. Analysis resulted in the identification of three key challenges during the course units, for PSTs in the first year of their PETE programme: (a) the diversity and disconnections within the course units; (b) (the lack of) membership; and (c) the absence of democratic spaces in PETE class discussions. In the year two of PETE during the school placement, three challenges were identified for the negotiation of meaning (NofM): (a) the lack of dialogue with and focus on pedagogical practice by the cooperating teacher; (b) working together and the pressure to individualise PSTs' education process; and (c) unreachable support and supervision from the university. We suggest that PETE programmes should emphasise pedagogical strategies that create spaces for the cultivation of CoPs. For instance, we suggest PST engagement in continuous and planned group work across curricular years (e.g. peer-teaching and micro-teaching experiences) to increase work group membership. We recommend the emphasis on discussion sessions mediated by a facilitator (e.g. TEs, CTs, or US) where the different working groups could share their repertoire of learning experiences as a CoP. Moreover, we suggest optimisation of a base of pedagogical knowledge regarding course units' integration between the TEs of the PETE to systematise the process and also, an increased connection between the university and the host school. Additionally, we propose continuous professional development by the CTs to facilitate the requirements of the PETE programme. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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31. 'Getting More Comfortable in an Uncomfortable Space': Learning to Become an Activist Researcher in a Socially Vulnerable Sport Context
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Luguetti, Carla and Oliver, Kimberly L.
- Abstract
Activist research engages all participants as co-researchers in order to challenge the status quo in hopes of creating spaces in which they will actively participate in their education and feel responsible for their own and others' learning. There are a number of challenges that researchers might face when engaging in activist research with co-researchers. In that sense, researchers must be open to multiple perspectives and critical attitudes in order to negotiate the challenges that arise in the process. This paper describes the challenges that the lead author faced in learning to become an activist researcher in a socially vulnerable sport context and how these challenges were negotiated. The lead author, supervised by the second author, conducted a six month activist research study in a soccer program in a socially and economically disadvantaged neighborhood in Brazil. Participants included two researchers (lead and second authors), 17 young people, four coaches, a pedagogic coordinator and a social worker as co-researchers. Multiple sources of data were collected, including 38 field journal/observations and audio records of: 18 youth work sessions, 16 coaches' work sessions, three combined coaches and youth work sessions, and 37 meetings between the lead author and the second author. By using an activist approach four challenges were identified and negotiated: learning to become more comfortable with an activist approach, helping young people to articulate what they know and the researcher to see what they say, valuing co-researchers' knowledge, and negotiating the culture of sport. We argue that challenges are essential, necessary and significant in an activist research project in order to transform ourselves as researchers and our relationship with others.
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- 2018
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32. 'Where Do I Go from Here?': Learning to Become Activist Teachers through a Community of Practice
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Oliver, Kimberly L., Luguetti, Carla, Aranda, Raquel, Nuñez Enriquez, Oscar, and Rodriguez, Ana-Alycia
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Background: Student-Centered Inquiry as Curriculum (SCIC) is an activist approach [Oliver, K. L., and H. A. Oesterreich. 2013. "Student-Centered Inquiry as Curriculum as a Model for Field-Based Teacher Education." "Journal of Curriculum Studies" 45 (3): 394-417. doi:10.1080/00220272.2012.719550] inspired by years of research with youth. It was designed as a means of listening and responding to youth in order to better facilitate students' interest, motivation, and learning in physical education settings. While we have a strong and growing body of activist research with youth in physical education, SCIC as a specific approach to working with youth is in its infancy; thus, there is a need to further explore the challenges teachers/researchers face learning to use this approach to teaching. Purpose: This study explores how educators, in different contexts, learn to use an activist approach called SCIC, in order to better facilitate students' interest, motivation, and learning in physical education and physical activity settings. Research setting and participants: Participants included a university professor, a college instructor, a postdoctoral student, a doctoral student, and a pre-service teacher. Data were collected between January and May 2016.Data collection and analysis: Data collection included weekly field notes and debriefings following observations, teacher artifacts, weekly collaborative group meetings, and two individual interviews per teaching participant. Discussion and conclusions: The main challenge that emerged was learning how to move from a theoretical understanding of student-centered pedagogy to the practice of student-centered pedagogy. Specifically, the amount of time that was necessary to build a foundation that allowed for student and teacher understanding, respect, and comfort, negotiating teacher and student assumptions that were embedded in the status quo of physical education (PE), and the struggle to gather and use meaningful data to guide pedagogical decisions. We negotiated these challenges through our professional learning community whereby we worked to all be able to see and name what was happening in our individual classes and collectively planned what was needed to move forward through these challenges.
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- 2018
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33. An Activist Approach to Sport Meets Youth from Socially Vulnerable Backgrounds: Possible Learning Aspirations
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Luguetti, Carla, Oliver, Kimberly L., Dantas, Luiz Eduardo Pinto Basto Tourinho, and Kirk, David
- Abstract
Purpose: This study was a 2-phase activist research project aimed at co-creating a prototype pedagogical model for working with youth from socially vulnerable backgrounds in a sport context. This article addresses the learning aspirations (learning outcomes) that emerged when we created spaces for youth to develop strategies to manage the risks they face in their community. Method: This study took place in a socially and economically disadvantaged neighborhood in a Brazilian city where we worked with a group of 17 boys aged 13 to 15 years old, 4 coaches, a pedagogic coordinator, and a social worker. During a 6-month period, we collected multiple sources of data including field journal entries/observations (38) and audio records of youth work sessions (18), coaches' work sessions (16), combined coaches and youth work sessions (3), and meetings between the lead and the 2nd author for debriefing and planning sessions (36). Results: By using an activist approach, 4 learning aspirations emerged: becoming responsible/committed, learning from mistakes, valuing each other's knowledge, and communicating with others. Conclusion: Findings suggest there is a need for more sports programs that start from young people's concrete needs and life situations and look to create places for youth to see alternative possibilities and take action.
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- 2017
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34. Exploring an Activist Approach of Working with Boys from Socially Vulnerable Backgrounds in a Sport Context
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Luguetti, Carla, Oliver, Kimberly L., Kirk, David, and Dantas, Luiz
- Abstract
This study explores an activist approach for co-creating a prototype pedagogical model of sport for working with boys from socially vulnerable backgrounds. This paper addresses the key features that emerged when we identified what facilitated and hindered the boys' engagement in sport. This study was an activist research project that was conducted between July 2013 and December 2013 in a soccer program in a socially and economically disadvantaged neighborhood in Brazil. The lead author, supervised by the second author, worked with a soccer class of 17 boys between ages 13 and 15, 4 coaches, a pedagogical coordinator and a social worker. Multiple sources of data were collected, including 38 field journal/observations and audio records of: 18 youth work sessions, 16 coaches' work sessions and 3 combined coaches and youth work sessions. In addition, the first and second author had 36 90-minute debriefing and planning sessions. By using an activist approach, three features were identified as being essential: an ethic of care, an attentiveness to the community and a community of sport. Findings suggest that it is possible to use sport as a cultural asset to benefit youth from socially vulnerable backgrounds by offering them a place where they can feel protected and dream about possible futures.
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- 2017
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35. 'The Life of Crime Does Not Pay; Stop and Think!': The Process of Co-Constructing a Prototype Pedagogical Model of Sport for Working with Youth from Socially Vulnerable Backgrounds
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Luguetti, Carla, Oliver, Kimberly L., Dantas, Luiz E. P. B. T., and Kirk, David
- Abstract
Purpose: This study discusses the process of co-constructing a prototype pedagogical model for working with youth from socially vulnerable backgrounds. Participants and settings: This six-month activist research project was conducted in a soccer program in a socially vulnerable area of Brazil in 2013. The study included 17 youths, 4 coaches, a pedagogic coordinator and a social worker. An expert in student-centered pedagogy and inquiry-based activism assisted as a debriefer helping in the progressive data analysis and the planning of the work sessions. Data collection/analysis: Multiple sources of data were collected, including 38 field journal/observation and audio records of: 18 youth work sessions, 16 coaches' work sessions, 3 combined coaches and youth work sessions, and 37 meetings between the researcher and the expert. Findings: The process of co-construction of this prototype pedagogical model was divided into three phases. The first phase involved the youth and coaches identifying barriers to sport opportunities in their community. In the second phase, the youth, coaches and researchers imagined alternative possibilities to the barriers identified. In the final phase, we worked collaboratively to create realistic opportunities for the youth to begin to negotiate some of the barriers they identified. In this phase, the coaches and youth designed an action plan to implement (involving a Leadership Program) aimed at addressing the youths' needs in the sport program. Five critical elements of a prototype pedagogical model were co-created through the first two processes and four learning aspirations emerged in the last phase of the project. Implications: We suggest an activist approach of co-creating a pedagogical model of sport for working with youth from socially vulnerable backgrounds is beneficial. That is, creating opportunities for youth to learn to name, critique and negotiate barriers to their engagement in sport in order to create empowering possibilities.
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- 2017
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36. Living within and outside a disciplinary bubble: a Foucauldian analysis of Brazilian gymnasts' experiences in boarding school.
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Costa, Vítor Ricci, Luguetti, Carla, Santos Oliveira, Mauricio dos, Pinheiro, Maria Claudia, and Nunomura, Myrian
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- *
GYMNASTS , *GYMNASTICS instruction , *PHYSICAL education , *BOARDING schools , *COACHING (Athletics) , *CONDUCT of life - Abstract
The gymnastics' environment has been criticised for producing uncompromising coaching practices, emotional disorders, harassment and abuse. Furthermore, the challenges faced by the young gymnasts can be acute when they live in gymnastics boarding schools, where many aspects of their lives are controlled. Drawing upon a Foucauldian lens, this study explores power relations in the lived experiences of former artistic gymnasts who trained in a gymnastics boarding school in Brazil, and the pedagogical and policy implications. Qualitative data were produced from semi-structured interviews with five former Brazilian artistic gymnasts, who described their everyday lives within and around the gymnastics boarding school. First, we explore how technologies of dominance produced a specific docile gymnast subjectivity and how this subjectivation process impacted the lived experiences of the gymnasts during their careers. Second, Foucault's later work on the technologies of the self helps us in the microanalysis of how gymnasts negotiated the process of moving out of a space with specific discourses and power relations, that impacted their everyday lives. In so doing, we explore the tensions between technologies of domination and technologies of self. We propose the following pedagogical and policy implications: (a) we question the notion that coaches, and even the gymnastics environment, automatically prepare the gymnasts for 'real life' through the application of disciplinary strategies; (b) we advocate for shifting from coercive and punitive strategies to discipline strategies that consider responsive pedagogies and (c) we highlight the importance of the co-responsibility and co-surveillance of stakeholders. Such pedagogical and policy implications might contribute to reflections in gymnastics, in elite athletes' programmes, and boarding school systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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37. Sensitivity, shared purpose, and learning community: a case study of a Brazilian sport program with children and young people from socially vulnerable backgrounds.
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Uhle, Eduardo Roberto, Palma, Bartira Pereira, Luguetti, Carla, and Galatti, Larissa Rafaela
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PHYSICAL education ,SOCIAL workers ,SOCIOEMOTIONAL selectivity theory ,CLASSROOM environment ,NONGOVERNMENTAL organizations - Abstract
This article draws on the Long-Term Program Development framework [Siwik, M., A. Lambert, D. Saylor, R. Bertram, C. Cocchiarella, and W. Gilbert. 2015. "Long Term Program Development (LTPD): An Interdisciplinary Framework for Developing Athletes, Coaches, and Sport Programs." International Sport Coaching Journal 2 (3): 305–316. doi:] to examine the strategies employed by a Brazilian sport program to address complex issues faced by children and young people from socially vulnerable backgrounds. This study took place in a non-governmental organization (NGO) sport program in Brazil. Participants included the founder of the sport program, a manager, two coordinators, five coaches, and a social worker. In addition, parents participated in a focus group. This research adopted a case study design. Data collection included: (a) individual interviews with program employees; (b) focus group interviews with parents; (c) lead researcher observations collected as field notes; and (d) document analysis. The findings highlighted three distinct themes. First, the program employees showed sensitivity to the specific characteristics of the socially vulnerable context, understanding that violence and lack of access were the main issues children and young people faced in their communities. Second, the program management team and the coaches recognized and agreed on a shared purpose for the sport program. They collaboratively reflected on a shared purpose, moving from focusing on teaching sport-techniques to include developing socio-emotional learning that would contribute to success in different aspects of life. Finally, a learning community had a central role in the program's functioning. The learning community was the reason why there was a shared purpose among providers and a recognition and sensitivity of the specific characteristics of the socially vulnerable context. The Long-Term Program Development framework provided a unique insight into the strategies employed by the NGO to achieve its goals and the key points that helped the NGO to succeed in its actions. This framework stressed the intricate parts of program managing, from the need to establish and share a purpose, to the context where one will be acting, to the importance of supporting these two parts with a learning environment and a sense of community. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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38. O planejamento das práticas esportivas escolares no ensino fundamental na cidade de Santos
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Luguetti, Carla Nascimento, Ferraz, Osvaldo Luiz, Nunomura, Myrian, and Böhme, Maria Tereza Silveira
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- 2015
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39. Enhancing social inclusion in sport: Dynamics of action research in super-diverse contexts.
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Spaaij, Ramon, Luguetti, Carla, McDonald, Brent, and McLachlan, Fiona
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- *
ACTION research , *SOCIAL integration , *SPORTS participation , *PUBLIC sociology , *COMMUNITIES , *ATHLETIC clubs , *SOCIALIZATION , *CULTURAL pluralism - Abstract
There are systemic and longstanding inequalities in sport participation for culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) migrants. Drawing on theoretical foundations of critical pedagogy and social justice education, as well as a public sociology perspective, this paper examines the development of an action research (AR) project to support the co-creation of inclusive climates in sports clubs in CALD communities in Melbourne, Australia. We use artefacts from collaborative sessions, interviews, and surveys to analyse the AR's impact on participating community sport leaders' awareness and practice. The findings indicate how the collaborative process of assessing clubs' diversity and inclusion climates affected participants' awareness of inequities and exclusionary practices, and how the co-creation of strategies for change brought together diverse perspectives. We reflect on the implications and limitations of the AR for research practice aimed at promoting equitable social inclusion for CALD migrants in community sport. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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40. Pre-service teachers’ experiences of an activist approach in a health and physical education teacher education context.
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Luguetti, Carla, Turelli, Fabiana, Speranza, Danielle, Wachter, Julie, and Konjarski, Loretta
- Subjects
- *
HEALTH education teachers , *PHYSICAL education teachers , *STUDENT teachers , *TEACHER educators , *RESEARCH personnel - Abstract
In the past four decades, health and physical education teacher education (HPETE) research has grown, emphasising social justice and activist approaches as a way to challenge the status quo of systems of oppression, including capitalism, imperialism, patriarchy, racism, LGBTQI+ phobia, and ableism. Despite a wealth of research on social justice and activist approaches in HPETE, there is a notable gap in understanding the outcomes for pre-service teachers (PSTs), necessitating further exploration into the impact and effectiveness of these approaches. This study aimed to explore PSTs’ experiences of an activist approach in an HPETE context. Participants included a teacher educator/researcher and 65 PSTs who experienced the activist approach within their HPETE program while working with school students. Data were collected from: (a) field notes from the teacher educator; (b) reflective diaries from the PSTs; (c) focus groups with the PSTs; and (d) artefacts from the PSTs. Findings were discussed under three themes highlighting the experiences of PSTs engaging with an activist approach in an HPETE program. First, the study underscored how PSTs understood and valued students’ voices and embraced a student-centred approach. Second, PSTs emphasised the pivotal role of building relationships and creating safe spaces within the health and physical education environment. Third, the findings underscored how PSTs understood the messiness in teaching and the need to understand students’ needs in experiencing the activist approach. By investigating PSTs’ encounters with the activist approach, the study provided insights into its effectiveness in enhancing PSTs’ learnings and informing their pedagogical practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. A collaborative self-study of ethical issues in participatory action research with refugee-background young people in grassroots football.
- Author
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Luguetti, Carla, Singehebhuye, Loy, and Spaaij, Ramón
- Subjects
YOUNG adults ,DIGNITY ,ETHICAL problems ,COMMUNITY-based participatory research ,DILEMMA ,AUTODIDACTICISM ,SOCCER - Abstract
This collaborative self-study explores the ethical ambiguities and dilemmas that emerged in participatory action research (PAR) with refugee-background young people in a grassroots football programme. The project comprised a six-month PAR in a football programme in Melbourne, Australia. Participants included the first author and 13 African Australian refugee-background young women. The ethical issues encountered concerned: (a) challenges of negotiating identities and the ethics and politics of knowledge production; (b) dilemmas in the collective struggle against, and resistance to, forms of oppression; and (c) the need to share power and the accompanying fear of losing research control. We recommend that PAR projects with refugee-background young people consider critical ethic of care as a framework for anticipating and navigating ethical issues that may arise. Such a framework can give form to sensitive conversations to reveal power relations, capture complexities and contradictions inherent within caring, and guide collective practices towards recovering dignity and equity within PAR. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Forced migration and sport: an introduction.
- Author
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Spaaij, Ramón, Luguetti, Carla, and De Martini Ugolotti, Nicola
- Subjects
FORCED migration ,SPORTS ethics ,CROSS-cultural communication ,SPORTS ,WORLD culture ,COMMUNICATION ethics ,CRITICAL analysis - Abstract
In introducing the Sport in Society special issue, this paper aims to extend and deepen conversations among scholars, policy makers and practitioners about the role of sport in relation to contexts and issues of forced migration. The five themes that cut across the contributions to this special issue address and expand existing and emerging concerns in the literature, specifically focusing on: 1) participatory methodologies, power, voice and ethics; 2) emotions and embodiment; 3) gendered, socio-ecological and intersectional perspectives; 4) critical perspectives on integration and intercultural communication; and 5) fandom and media representations of forced migrants in elite sport. Often contributing to several of these themes at once, the papers in this special issue critically analyse and interrogate the implications of existing approaches, practices, and research around sport and forced migration. They do so by engaging with complex, yet necessary, dialogues and perspectives that cross disciplinary boundaries, and by not shying away from conceptual and ethical tensions that interrogate concepts, methodologies, policies and forms of representation regarding forced migrants' experiences and contributions to global sporting cultures. While not (cl)aiming to exhaustively address the wide variety of issues and contexts that are relevant to the relationship between sport and forced migration, the papers in this special issue provide key contributions to advance critical scholarly analyses and inform applied interventions on the ground. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Beyond integration: football as a mobile, transnational sphere of belonging for refugee-background young people.
- Author
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Nunn, Caitlin, Spaaij, Ramón, and Luguetti, Carla
- Subjects
REFUGEES ,SPORTS participation ,PARTICIPATION ,SOCCER ,SPHERES ,EVERYDAY life ,RESEARCH implementation ,LAND settlement - Abstract
Sport is widely utilised as an integration tool for refugee-background young people in resettlement countries, with a concomitant research focus on the implementation and outcomes of health and integration initiatives. However, a narrow focus on integration as the context and outcome of sport participation limits our understanding of the wider role sport plays as a sphere of belonging for refugee-background young people. By taking a wider view of football that includes fandom, informal participation, and community sport, we can gain important insights into how it functions as a mobile, transnational sphere of belonging that can, for some, provide a continuous sense of embodied, affective, practical, and sociocultural belonging in the face of multiple migrations and transitions. Drawing on three ethnographic and participatory studies conducted with refugee-background young people in the United Kingdom, Australia, and the Netherlands, this article explores the ways in which engagement with football both precedes and exceeds integration in the everyday lives of refugee-background young people. The authors demonstrate the need to place instrumental sports-based integration approaches in a wider transnational and historical context, and to attend to the wider affordances of sport for refugee-background young people. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. <italic>Hermanas</italic> in dialogue: amplifying female South American voices in Australian Health and Physical Education Teacher Education.
- Author
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Varea, Valeria, Goncalves, Luiza Lana, and Luguetti, Carla Nascimento
- Subjects
- *
PHYSICAL education teachers , *HEALTH education teachers , *PRAXIS (Process) , *RACISM in education , *CRITICAL consciousness - Abstract
In the landscape of a multicultural society, this paper explores the absence of diversity in Australian Health and Physical Education Teacher Education (HPETE): a prevailing White profession. This study delves into the complex and non-linear narratives of silenced voices, shedding light on the urgent need to investigate the experiences of non-White (female) HPETE scholars with English as an additional language. The paper aims to explore the intersections of ethnicity, gender, age, sexuality and language of three South American women who live in Australia and work in HPETE (us). Inspired by decolonial and Southern theories, we want to introduce knowledge that was created in the Global South and, therefore, we use the work of Freire [(1987).
Pedagogia Do Oprimido [Pedagogy of the oppressed] (17th ed). Paz e Terra.] as a theoretical framework mainly with his concepts of praxis andconscientização [critical consciousness], together with critical intersectional feminism. We also utilised a Freirean-inspired method for data generation (‘pedagogical letters’), and feminist-originated collective biographies. Findings reveal our struggles to survive colour-blindness Australian HPETE, particularly to being labelled as ‘exotic’, how our South American physical education knowledge is not often valued in our workplaces, and the struggles with the neoliberal university system. In our final letter addressed to other non-White female HPETE scholars, orlas hermanas , we underscore the importance of amplifying our voices, fostering dialogue and collectively challenging the existing structures that perpetuate exclusionary practices within HPETE. Our hope with this paper is to inspire a transformative shift towards inclusivity and recognition of diverse voices within HPETE, fostering a more equitable and reflective HPETE space. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. CRITÉRIOS PARA DETECÇÃO E SELEÇÃO DE JOVENS ATLETAS DE BASQUETEBOL NA CIDADE DE SÃO PAULO.
- Author
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Silve Filho, Florio Joaquim, Luguetti, Carla Nascimento, De Oliveira Paes, Fernando, and Silveira Böhme, Maria Tereza
- Subjects
- *
BASKETBALL , *BASKETBALL players , *BASKETBALL coaches , *SPORTS , *BASKETBALL teams - Abstract
The present study aimed to determine the used criterias for sport talents detection and selection for male young basketball athletes. Therefore twelve coaches of three initial competitive categories, whose teams participated in the Sao Paulo Federation of Basketball Championship in the year 2008 were interviewed. Semi structured interviews were done with coaches; the results were analyzed through Collective Subject Discourse(LEFÈVRE; LEFÈVRE, 2003). It was observed that coaches do not use the potential of school as a mean for detection. It is concluded that the detection and selection process is seen in univariate and punctual by most coaches assessed, and measures of growth (mainly the height) are important. However it is not taken into account the maturational stage of the young. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
46. Criteria for sport talents detection and selection for young basketball athletes in the city of São Paulo.
- Author
-
Filho, Florio Joaquim Silva, Luguetti, Carla Nascimento, Paes, Fernando de Oliveira, and Böhme, Maria Tereza Silveira
- Abstract
The present study aimed to determine the used criterias for sport talents detection and selection for male young basketball athletes. Therefore twelve coaches of three initial competitive categories, whose teams participated in the Sao Paulo Federation of Basketball Championship in the year 2008 were interviewed. Semi structured interviews were done with coaches; the results were analyzed through Collective Subject Discourse(LEFÈVRE; LEFÈVRE, 2003). It was observed that coaches do not use the potential of school as a mean for detection. It is concluded that the detection and selection process is seen in univariate and punctual by most coaches assessed, and measures of growth (mainly the height) are important. However it is not taken into account the maturational stage of the young. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
47. Sport, Refugees, and Forced Migration: A Critical Review of the Literature.
- Author
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Spaaij R, Broerse J, Oxford S, Luguetti C, McLachlan F, McDonald B, Klepac B, Lymbery L, Bishara J, and Pankowiak A
- Abstract
Researchers, policy makers, and practitioners increasingly pay attention to sport and physical activity as a means and context for refugee wellbeing and integration, influenced by wider political and policy concerns about forced migration. Considering this growing scholarly and policy attention, it is timely to take stock of, and critically reflect on, recent developments in this field of research. This paper offers an integrative, critical review of the scientific literature on the topic. It critically synthesizes what is known about the sport and physical activity experiences of people with refugee and forced migrant backgrounds, and identifies key issues and directions for future research in this field. This review of contemporary academic literature comprises 83 publications derived from fourteen languages published between 1996 and 2019. It shows a substantial increase in the volume of published research on the topic in recent years (2017-2019). Published research is concentrated primarily in Western countries around the themes of health promotion, integration and social inclusion, and barriers and facilitators to participation in sport and physical activity. The findings foreground the use of policy categories, deficit approaches, and intersectionalities as three pressing challenges in this area of research. Based on this synthesis, the authors identify four research gaps that require attention in future research: the experiential (embodied emotional) dimensions of sport and physical activity, the need to decolonize research, the space for innovative methodologies, and research ethics., (Copyright © 2019 Spaaij, Broerse, Oxford, Luguetti, McLachlan, McDonald, Klepac, Lymbery, Bishara and Pankowiak.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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