Version 2 2018-01-29, 03:49Version 2 2018-01-29, 03:49
Version 1 2018-01-28, 01:21Version 1 2018-01-28, 01:21
journal contribution
posted on 2018-01-29, 03:49authored byOve Olsen Sæle, Åse Nylenna Akslen, Astrid Øien Halsnes
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<p>In this article, preschool student teachers’ thinking of young children’s physical activities
is discussed. The study is based on individual “pedagogic creed” texts written by
preschool student teachers at a university college in Bergen, Norway, in their first and
third years of the educational program. Students describe in detail what they associate
with the term physical activity and the formation qualities it possesses. The material is
extensive and this article will focus on some of the findings, such as how students see
children’s physical activity in connection to motor, social, and moral development. How
the students’ perceive physical activity, as a component in a more holistic thinking of
children and formation, is also part of the analysis, as well as their thinking of the role
and responsibility of the teaching staff. We find that the arguments for physical activity
are different, and students’ foci change during the education program, from an I and
child perspective in their first year of the educational program, to a more reflective and
academic perspective focused more on the role of the leader in their third year. </p>
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