History of Physical Education in Europe II
History of Physical Education in Europe II
History of Physical Education in Europe II
EDUCATION IN EUROPE
II
Leposavic, 2015.
Leposavic, 2015.
Book:
HISTORY OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION IN EUROPE
II
Editors:
Petar D. Pavlovic (Republic of Srpska)
Nenad Zivanovic (Serbia)
Branislav Antala (Slovakia)
Kristina M. Pantelic Babic, (Republic of Srpska)
Publishers:
University of Pristina, Faculty of Sport and Physical
Education in Leposavic
FIEP Europe - History of Physical Education and Sport
Section
Authors:
Branislav Antala
(Slovakia)
Fedor Ivanovich
Sobyanin (Russia)
Demirhan Giyasettin
(Turkey)
Ferman Konukman
(Turkey)
Elizaveta Alekseevna
Bogacheva (Russia)
Frantisek Seman
(Slovakia)
Sergii Ivashchenko
(Ukraine)
Sladjana Mijatovic
(Serbia)
Marjeta Kovac
(Slovenia)
Natlia Smolenkov
(Slovakia)
Vladimir Nikolaevich
Irkhin (Russia)
Nenad Zivanovic
(Serbia)
Reviewers:
Jela Labudova (Slovakia)
Nicolae Ochiana (Romania)
Veroljub Stankovic (Serbia)
Zoran Milosevic (Serbia)
Prepress:
Kristina M. Pantelic Babic
Printed by:
ABL PRINT, Mlynarovicova 5, Bratislava, Slovakia
Book-jacket:
Anton Lednicky
Circulation:
100 copies
ISBN 978-86-82329-53-4
TABLE OF CONTENTS
FOREWORD
ON PHYSICAL EDUCATION AND SPORTS
Nenad ivanovi, FIEP Europe, President of History of Physical
Education and Sport Section, Serbia.
More on this in: Milosevic, Z. and Berar M. Tracing the Term Physical Education, Physical
Education and Sport Through the Centuries, Vol.1, Iss. 1. 4452.
Education and science that the Humanists took over from the priests and monks ceased to be the
"handmaiden of theology" and became a "teacher of life". In that school, as well as in the amended
environmental practices, one new man was formed. It was the man of this world who wanted to
live out his life to the fullest and improve the gifts with which he was endowed (so he thought) by
nature. To this and such a man ecstatic humanists sang the hymns. They tell him about his
"excellence" (exelenntia) and his "dignity" (dignitas). They equate him with God (quidem mortalis
deus) and encourage him to the comprehensive application of his own strength and quality (virtus),
the constant striving to be a "noble" and "free" (nobilitis et liber), and to achieve fame (laus). We
should now be able to add the competition, as well. After all, this is the motto of the EU, which is
written in its founding documents. This is so because with the neoliberal concept of planning and
management and the replacement of capitalism with the bankism (Gerald Selent), a Neohumanist
approach is quite possible. And, unfortunately, we are witnessing where it leads.
10
It is appropriate, at least briefly to recall of the basic facts relating to these, for our profession,
significant people:
Francisco Petrarch (1304-1374) was the first who was able to show the culture of the ancient
Greeks and Romans. With his own money he has funded deciphering the Latin alphabet. His
name is linked to the humanistic movement in Italy.
Pietro Paolo Vergerio (1349-1420), in his treatise on the Education of the Master of
Padovas son, stated as a topic of conversation: his character and discipline, free- open
minded learning, physical exercise, training in art (the art of) war, recreation. He pointed out
three allies: health, physical exercise and recreation, as well as the necessity of the
knowledge about health and all this he substantiated with many examples of the vigorous
physical exercise and recreational activities.
Vitorino de Feltre (1378-1446), followed the ideas of Greece and Rome on the importance
of physical exercise, but he stressed the importance of ball games, jumping and fencing. He
was declared the first teacher of the Renaissance as his program has well balanced the
physical, intellectual and moral education.
Aeneas Sylvius Picocomini (1405-1464) is one of the most important humanists who later
became the Pope. He claimed that the organism is indivisible and that the physical activity
helps the development of all human abilities.
Mafeus Vegius (1405-1458) believed that education should develop all of man's physical
and spiritual qualities. He especially emphasized the importance of health habits and
advocated that physical education should be free education, not to exceed in the extreme, but
to be approached as a good recreation activity.
Jakob Sadoleto (1477-1547) was the pope's secretary. But he wanted, following the model of
the ancient Greeks, to connect physical exercise and music. This was of great importance
because after many centuries this issue was given the proper attention.
Hieronymus Mercurialis (1530-1606) recommended physical activity for health. He was not
inclined to asceticism and complete specialization. He made a division of gymnastics into
the preventive and therapeutic ones. He believed that physical activities represent an integral
part of the free education.
Desiderius Erasmus (1466-1536) recommended physical exercise as part of the education of
children. He emphasized the importance of generous movements, but of these that will have
a positive impact in their lives. That is why he was against the creation of the athletes.
Martin Luther (1483-1546), was an enthusiasts who believed that physical training is of
great importance for the education of the youth. He was imbued with the idea of the
"muscular Christians" (Muscular Christianity). He recommended that music should be used
as a useful and beneficial activity, and fencing and wrestling were considered as beneficial
and healthy physical activities.
Ulrich Zwingli (1484-1531) believed that the games and sport were important for children
and youth. He felt that games and sport contained a certain degree of skills and that they
were very useful for the organism.
Franois Rabelais (1483-1553), a writer and doctor, can be called a classical humanist. He is
known for his works Gargantua and Pantagruel, in which he outlined his views on education.
In his program physical education occupies an important place, which is based on the seven
skills: wrestling, running, jumping, shooting, riding, and all types of military skills. Rabelais
described the exercises that are suitable for enclosed spaces (training rooms).
Jan Amos Comenius (1592-1670) has by his practical and theoretical works contributed
most to the development of physical education. He has in his major works laid a solid
foundation of our profession. In the General Didactics (Didactica Magna) he presented his
views on education on the basis of the premise that "schools are not torture houses, nor
prisons as lunatics think, but places to play in". And then he conveyed another message:
"With prowess and not fraud to win". In his second book, The World in Photos (Orbis
11
Pictus), written in four languages he described all physical exercises and competitions then
known in Europe. This is an encyclopedic work, which is very important for the History of
physical education and sport. In addition to these important books, Comenius, as the director
of a school in Saros Patok, has alloted to the subject of physical education place and time
within the school curriculum. Thus, a subject of physical education has for the first time,
taken seriously and equalled with all other achool subjects (disciplines) that were taught in
school. (According to: Zivanovic, N. Contribution to the epistemology of physical
education. Ni, Panopticon, 2000, 147-154).
The other notable personalities for our profession, from the time of the Reformation, and later,
will be discussed in the framework of the Theory of the development of physical education and
sport.
12
Theories
Development
of
the
Physical
Education
and
Sport
13
14
10
Johann Bernhard Basedow (1723-1790) has by its theoretical and practical work contributed to a
new approach to the physical education. He opened a school called "Philanthropinum," in Dessau,
in 1774. Contemporaries have called this school a "High school for humanity." In it the plan of the
daily work schedules looked like this: 7 hours - sleeping; 6 hours - dressing, feeding, rest and
recreation; 1 hour - correspondence and neatness; 5 hours - studying and intellectual work; 3 hours
- physical exercise, dance and music; 2 hours - handmade works (with physical exertion).
Throughout the summer students would spend about a month in the camp, where the nature
replaced textbooks, and another month was planned to carry out the practical work with the
peasants, craftsmen and merchants. The basics of the physical education in the Philanthropinum,
was "Dessauss Pentathlon", which consisted of: running, jumping, climbing, cargo carrying and
balancing (balance exercises). Great attention was paid to the persistent walking, swimming and
rowing. He advocated also for a broad application of games and gave methodological guidelines
for their application. He believed that the games developed prowess and provide emotional
experience - creating the conditions for a good life.
11
Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi (1746-1827) a Swiss educator has built his own position, which is
predominantly directing gymnastics towards raising the health and resilience of the body against
natural influences that can endanger it. In this context, special attention was devoted to
strengthening and training locomotor apparatus. Therefore, with him for the first time, simple joint exercises appeared. Pestalozzi has coming from town to village, begun to deal with the poor
children upbringing. In 1800 he managed to establish the "House of Education", which was later
moved to Iferten and became famous throughout the world. His "House of Education" resembles
very much the "House of Play" of Vittorino Rambaldoni (1378-1446). Among his many works the
most important are the following: Leonard and Gertrude and How Gertrude teaches her children.
There he also presented his views on the necessity of the integrated education. Because of this, he
believes that physical education should be a means of forming the spirit as well as the moral and
aesthetic education.
12
Johann Friedrich GutsMuths (1759-1839) is one of the most important theorists and creators of
the systematization of physical exercises. He spent some time in Salzmanns Philanthropinum,
where he received a needed experience in gymnastics work. The principles underlying his theory
and methodology are current even nowadays, which tells how his work is built into the basics of
the later system of gymnastics, and even today's physical education. Here are these principles:
natural practicing of the primitive peoples civilized ones should replace with
gymnastics skills; these may be military, athletic and medical, but the only type
for all of them should be the - pedagogical gymnastics;
the duty of the most educated countries and all the teachers should be to
organize propaganda of the pedagogical gymnastics. That means everyday
gymnastics for all ... To create an atmosphere for gymnastics;
there is a need to reinforce the concern about hygiene and one should
recommend exercise in the fresh air;
in a teaching method one should count on the age, sex, profession, and the
composition of those who practice.
GutsMuths has in its systematization of physical exercises singled out:
a) real gymnastic exercises - jumping, running, throwing, wrestling, climbing,
balancing, dancing, etc.;
b) handicrafts;
c) social games for the youngsters.
15
Rudolf von Laban (1879-1958) was a dancer and theoretician. In 1936 he emigrated to London
(England) and there he has, within his pedagogical work, developed a system of "education by
movement". He had claimed four aspects of movement (flow, time, space and path), eight
combinations and sixteen ranks. Soon the term "movement" has become the most important term
in the representation of Labans concepts, and the phrases such as "art of movement", "gymnastics
by movement" and "education by movement" became the integral part of the vocabulary of
physical education.
14
mile Jaques-Dalcroze (1865-1950) as a good musician has always helped his disciples to use
movements to more easily become good musicians. After the Second World War his ideas were
accepted also in the British schools and were known as "music and movement".
15
Maria Montessori (18701952) Maria Montessori (1870-1952) has built on the ideas of
Rousseau, Pestalozzi and Froebel her own educational system, in which the play and movement
were important elements. She said that "what really makes the teacher is his love for a human
child; because love is what differentiates the social duty of the educational worker and creates a
higher awareness of his mission.
16
Franz Nachtegall (1777-1847) founded the first gymnastics institute in Europe, which was, in
fact, the basis for the further development of physical education in Denmark. When the practical
benefits of such work were noticed, daily basis physical exercising was introduced as a
compulsory subject in schools (1801). He soon opened in Copenhagen a military gymnastics
school for the education of the professional staff. In addition to the practical work Nachtegall
wrote gymnastics manuals.
17
Pehr Henrik Ling (1776-1839) spent five years in Nachtegalls school in Copenhagen, and on
his return to Sweden he formed a new system of gymnastics. Sweden as Denmark, was in a
delicate international political situation, thus it was necessary to use the Civil Army (citizens) to
16
17
The development of sport is very distinctive. After the English bourgeois revolution, the new
social relations resulted in the class compromise of the English aristocracy and bourgeoisie, both at
the political and the economic levels. This was reflected in physical education, too and as a
product of that compromise a modern sport was created. It was created by merging some forms of
physical exercise and games favorite to the nobility (riding, fencing, hunting, swimming) and the
folk forms of competition (running, wrestling, pugilism, rowing).
21
Thomas Arnold (17951842) as a director of the college in Rugby, while watching children's
sporting events, realized and understood their significance for the education of children. Therefore,
they were included in the school curriculum. The motto of Thomas Arnold was to educate the
Christians - gentlemen. Self-improvement was something that represented a key education, which
had resulted in the creation of pedagogical system based on freedom. And in all this sporting
competitions had played an important role.
22
Thomas Hughes has as the successor of the ideas of Thomas Arnold, founded the movement
"Muscular Christian youth" (1842). Thus, sport helped young people to recognize the act of
freedom in the true sense of the word.
23
Pierre de Coubertin (1863-1937), has by his enthusiasm, work and his own money managed to
realize one for a long time present idea of restoring the ancient Olympic Games.
18
there he got familiarized with the sports games and, after returning to
France, started propagating sport. It was fruitful and in 1896 in
Athens (Greece) the first new Olympic Games were held. Today,
sport is experiencing a large and rapid development and is present in
all parts of the world.
The theory of anthropocentrism
The theory of anthropocentrism was established on the
philosophical worldview believing that man is the center of the
world and the ultimate purpose of its development. This theory
unifies all the previous theories of development: ethnocentrism,
biocentrism and egocentrism.
Its main features are:
1. Development of physical abilities and health,
2. Increase in social development (progress)
3. Improving the level of knowledge and skills in sports and
games,
4. Development of leading capabilities and increasing
opportunities for the cooperation with others,
5. Development of broad-based recreational skills,
especially for leisure time during the holidays.
These characteristics of the anthropocentristic approach to
physical exercise, although at first glance recognizable, represent a
distillate of the new desires and thoughts about the necessity of
human health and happiness. In doing so, it is suggested that these
two postulates, health and happiness are something that is a
necessity and purpose of man and that any form of the physical
exercise should comply with it. Of course, there is omitted closer
defining not only of health but also of happiness, but is associated
with the society in which human rights and freedom are achieved.
And accordingly, this philosophy of physical exercise first appeared
in Scandinavia and North America. In the second half of the 20th
century O. strand24 and K. Cooper25, each in their own way,
Per-Olof strand (19222015) had his research studies which were basically the interval
method, in his later works, in the mid eighties of the 20th century, completely rejected and
24
19
replaced with the idea that man needed physical activity during the day, for 30 minutes, in the
various combinations of time intervals.
25
Kenneth H. Cooper (1931) had by his research established a system of physical exercise which
is known as Aerobics. He, like strand, had based his system on 10,000 steps in a day. His ideas
are now used in many fitness centers.
26
Jane Fonda (1937) a film actress who aimed her exercise programs at women had made a
turning point in relation to the style of exercise and attitude of women towards their physical
appearance. She had developed a special program known as Aerobic exercise for women.
20
The words of the Apostle Paul addressed at the weaken Corinthians: "I have the right to do
anything, but not everything is beneficial. I have the right to do anythingbut I will not be
mastered by anything." (I Cor. 6, 12).
28
Nenad Zivanovic (1946), University of Nis, Serbia.
29
Zoran Milosevic (1962), University of Novi Sad, Serbia.
30
Terms which combine and contain physical education and sport, were different at different
times, and in different social environments. From the Renaissance to the end of the 19th and
beginning of the 20th century were dominated by the terms: the body exercise and gymnastics, and
in England sport. Later, the other two terms were crystallized from which the organizational
structure of our specialized field drew, as well as theoretical and practical work, namely: physical
education and sport
31
We recall of the classification of sport specific to the target sports:
School sport - Registered sport Recreational sport
Registration sport is divided into: amateur, top and professional sports.
(According to: Nenad Zivanovic, et al., Theory of Physical Education. Nis, Panopticon, 2010, p.
21
After an ominous wave of sports violence of the 80s of the 20th century, we are witnessing new
outbursts of violence in all its forms. Fights of the athletes, fights of the fans, murder of fans
(Istanbul 2014), provocations at the football stadiums (Belgrade, London, ..., 2014), all of it
foretells, as well as the late 20th century, the coming evil times. In doing so, obscene and
hypocritical explanations of these events indicate that the present civilization recognizes only - the
current time and the Darwinian concept of competition.
33
More on this in: Nenad Zivanovic, Apology of physical exercise. Nis, Panopticon, 2011.
34
Amateur sport, as one of the segments of the registered sport, with excellent and professional,
very often is treated as a recreational sport. Between them there is not only a terminological but
also the conceptual difference already, and it should be taken into account during each expert
analysis.
35
School sport, by its very terminological definition, by its attribute school puts emphasis on
education. And until it does, and while sport in school term does not prevail, there is still hope that
the sports competitions in school have a primary goal - education, rather than - (exclusively) sports
scores. And that childrens school sports dreams and sports competitions would represent one nice
part of their childhood and youth.
22
but also to the conceptual ones. And that would be disastrous for us
all. Because if we say - sport in school, this means that in this phrase
emphasis is placed on the attribute sport. This inevitably entails cruel
clear fact - that we will have in school sport with all of its
particularly negative, characteristics. Let us mention only one of
them, and it is to achieve the result at any cost. If we let the result
be the primary goal and do everything for its realization, then the
school and its role in education of the young people will turn into a
service station of the registered sport. This is not just an ominous
assumption, but a harsh reality that we face. The cure for this terrible
disease are certainly the new humanists and teachers who love man,
but the man who has the personality - one, unique and unrepeatable.
Physical education and its very name suggests that through
physical exercise as the beneficial food, we build up the personality
of all our students. In addition, relying on the Orthodox Christian
anthropology and ethics derived from it, we know that only through
love I am what I am (O. Justin Popovic). Therefore, if we know that,
we will not be the teachers who will go in for the idea of this New
World and regard our student as an object, commodities to be
exploited to achieve our own goals, but we should observe him as a
personality, unique and unrepeatable. We know that in this given
freedom lies our responsibility. This responsibility makes quite
comprehensive the Orthodox Christian understanding of freedom,
which is reflected in the self-restrain for the sake of the others
(Solzhenitsyn). And in this effort to see others besides himself, the
man is realized as a person. Certainly, it is not an easy task at all, not
only to understand but also to perform, but we should head on in that
direction.
Our teacher, educator and expert ( in this very order) loves
his students and strives to be the Anatoly - their light and the light of
our profession as well. He makes effort because he knows that one
educates with love and by setting personal example - role model.
This is how we observe physical education, and the book in
front of you talks about it.
23
REPUBLIC OF SRPSKA
PHYSICAL EDUCATION IN SCHOOLS IN
BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA
Petar D. Pavlovic, Faculty of Physical Education and Sports,
University of Banja Luka
Kristina M. Pantelic Babic, Faculty of Physical Education and
Sports, University of Banja Luka
Correspondence
Kristina Pantelic Babic
[email protected]
Phone: +387 65 597 685
Social, economic, cultural, educational, political and other
kind of development, as also beginnings and development of
physical exercise in schools of Bosnia and Herzegovina, can be
divided in several periods: a) period until 1463, b) period from 1463
to 1878, c) period from 1878 to 1918, d) period from 1918 to 1945,
and e) period from 1945 onwards. We find first three periods
interesting for our subject (from the beginning until 1918), because
in these periods appeared first ideas and initiatives about
introduction of teaching of physical education (PE), as also
implementation of PE in curriculum of schools from that period.
Period until 1463
By formation of first countries in that territory their
habitants were in constant conflict with surrounding people, and
there were also fights between tribes over the territory
predominance, so it was quite understandable that a lot of time was
dedicated to physical exercise and practicing of martial skills in
purpose of creating stronger, faster, agile and more endurable
warrior.
In different gatherings, celebrations around churches and
monasteries, weddings, coronations of rulers and other religious
feasts, knights, noblemen and others gathered to compete and by that
24
25
etc. Until the end of Turkish occupation there were 56 schools with
75 teachers. Back then there were no separate school buildings, but
teaching was provided mostly in private houses. There was no
curriculum as we are familiar with today. They studied: reading,
writing, calculus, religious subjects, etc. Subject Physical Education
(gymnastics, games or physical exercises) did not exist. But even it
was not a part of the curriculum, some teachers introduced certain
forms of physical exercise and competition, as also traditional games
of that territory. 4
Teacher Andre Pavasovi came to Mostar at the end of 1846
and brought to his school [] whole new spirit and quickly gained
pupils hearts. Instead of boring classes he was reading national
poems with children and told them stories about Serbian past []
Andro introduced excursions with pupils where he taught them to
sing and marvel. 5
Zivko R. Crnogorcevic in his memoirs wrote about teachers
who, on their own accord, organized and performed certain forms of
physical exercise for their students.
When I taught school and all other
children from 1850 to 1856, all our
teachers
took
us
to
regration
(contributions in goods that students
brought to their teachers) [] And when
we all gather, the teacher call us by his
catalogue, and we stand two by two in a
row, and we go under the hill [] and
there we play all different kind of
games, like: priest, chase, firiz, batinbacac and jumping, which child will
jump more, and the teacher supervises
and walk around us. When the water is
worm by summer he takes us to
. :
1918. , ,
, 1988; i Jelena Dopua: Fizika kultura u kolama Bosne i
Hercegovine od prvih poetaka do 1918. godine, Sarajevo, 1974.
5
: , ,
1933, p. 61.
4
26
27
28
collected national games and wrote them down, some even published
in pedagogical journals. 9
Middle schools
Middle schools were not like today, but they were on higher
level than primary schools, and therefore we can call them high
schools. There were more middle schools: Serbian real gymnasium
in Sarajevo (established around 1852); Serbian private female school
in Sarajevo (established in 1857 of 1858) named Staka Skenderova
School; Private spiritual school in Zitomislic monastery (1858);
Institute of Mia Irbijeva in Sarajevo (1866 or 1869); Small Serbian
Real School in Mostar (1868); Serving school in Sarajevo (1864);
Theological school in Banja Luka (1866), and others. Among listed
schools, only in Theological school in Banja Luka was a subject
Gymnastics in the curriculum, equal to other subjects, having great
significance. In other schools there was no Physical Education
(Gymnastics) as a subject in curriculums. But we can assume that
certain teachers, as also in primary schools, organized and performed
certain physical exercises and games on their own accord. For
example, Aleksa Suskalovic, who when working in primary school
organized different kind of physical exercise for his students, when
in 1852 transferred to Serbian gymnasium in Sarajevo, he probably
organized the same exercises from high school students too. 10
According to some sources students of Private spiritual
school in Zitomislic monastery unsolicited [] practiced national
sports and national games. 11
Jelena Dopua: Fizika kultura u kolama Bosne i Hercegovine od prvih poetaka do
1918. godine, Sarajevo, 1974, p. 148.
10
Jelena Dopua: Fizika kultura u kolama Bosne i Hercegovine od prvih poetaka
do 1918. godine, Sarajevo, 1974; . :
1918. ,
, , 1988; Todor Kruevac:
Srpska realka gimnazija u Sarajevu, knj. 3, Sarajevo, 1963; :
1941. ,
, 1953; Mitar Papi: kolstvo u Bosni i Hercegovini za vrijeme
austrougarske okupacije (1878 1918), Sarajevo, 1972; -:
, , 1901.
11
efik Pai: Mostar, pismeni podaci, 1972, citirano u Jelena Dopua: Fizika
kultura u kolama Bosne i Hercegovine od prvih poetaka do 1918. godine, Sarajevo,
1974.
9
29
30
: , , . 24, .
11, , 1909, . 172.
17
:
, , . 4 5,
, 1968, . 101.
18
Petar D. Pavlovi, Nenad ivanovi and Kristina Panteli Babi: Vaso Pelagi, prvi
teoretiar fizike kulture u Bosni i Hercegovini, etvrti meunarodni nauni kongres
Antropoloki aspekti sporta, fizikog vaspitanja i rekreacije, Zbornik radova, ur. S.
Simovi, Banja Luka, 2013, str. 65 71.
16
31
Middle schools
Regarding middle schools Croats had: high schools
(gymnasiums), real schools, catholic real schools and small real
schools.
In Kraljeva Sutjeska, Kresevo and Fojnica (after 1757) in
Franciscans convents started to work first high schools
(gymnasiums). A little bit later schools were founded also in Guca
Gora and Siroki Brijeg. 22 Classes of PE (Gymnastics and Games)
were not performed. But pupils unsolicited [] in their free time
did national sports and games. 23
Julijan Jelini: Kultura i bosanski franjevci, knj. 2, Sarajevo, 1915; i Jelena Dopua:
Fizika kultura u kolama Bosne i Hercegovine od prvih poetaka do 1918. godine,
Sarajevo, 1974.
20
Todays Mrkonjic Grad.
21
Ibid.
22
Julijan Jelini: Kultura i bosanski franjevci, knj. 2, Sarajevo, 1915.
23
efket Pai: Pismeni podaci, citirano u Jelena Dopua: Fizika kultura u kolama
Bosne i Hercegovine od prvih poetaka do 1918. godine, Sarajevo, 1974, str. 20.
19
32
33
27
: 1800
1878, , 1965; :
1941. , , 1953; Mitar Papi: kolstvo u
Bosni i Hercegovini za vrijeme austrougarske okupacije (1878 1918), Sarajevo,
1972; Jelena Dopua: Fizika kultura u kolama Bosne i Hercegovine od prvih
poetaka do 1918. godine, Sarajevo, 1974.
28
: 1800
1878, , 1965; :
(1463-1918),
, 1965; Jelena Dopua: Fizika kultura u kolama Bosne i Hercegovine od
prvih poetaka do 1918. godine, Sarajevo, 1974.
29
: 1800
1878, , 1965; Mitar Papi: kolstvo u Bosni i Hercegovini za vrijeme
austrougarske okupacije (1878 1918), Sarajevo, 1972; Jelena Dopua: Fizika
kultura u kolama Bosne i Hercegovine od prvih poetaka do 1918. godine, Sarajevo,
1974.
34
Primary schools
There were neither gyms nor playgrounds or areas were
classes of Gymnastics (PE) could be performed, and [] rarely any
of schools at the time, except Serbian school in Sarajevo, had a
special gym for that purpose. 30
First data about implementation of Gymnastics (PE)
teaching in Serbian primary schools we found in journal Bosanska
Vila from 1886: Some more conscious teachers and church-school
boards, where mostly was leading Sarajevo, introduced gymnastics
in Serbian schools that year. They recommended it for both male and
female children.31
Stevo Kaludjercic, teacher of Serbian primary school in
Sarajevo in 1899 wrote a curriculum for Serbian primary schools,
and in that curriculum, among other subjects, was also Gymnastics.
In his annual report for primary schools he also stated the teaching
basics for Gymnastics, where under point no. 12 was written: Goal:
development, strengthening and better movement of the body by free
and social games. In all classes are done gymnastics exercises,
games in one place and in the move, jumping from one place and
with run-up. (Done only at summer). 32 Number of week classes
was not stated.
We will use an example from Serbian primary school in
Visoko to show how certain teachers performed teaching of this
subject. Mirko Vukojevic, former pupil of that school, later an expert
for gymnastics, who attended the school from 1899 to 1903, gave the
following data to Jelena Dopudja:
The teachers were the excuse, mostly
from Vojvodina Until then we did not
have that subject. And when Dusan
Zivojnovic (Vojvodina) came to be the
teacher, he announced to pupils: We
will have gymnastics in the afternoon!
The pupils did not know what
Stevo Kalueri: Podaci o srp-prav. kolama, Narodno jedinstvo, ilustrovani
zvanini almanah kalendar Drinske banovine za 1932. godinu, Sarajevo, 1932, p.
362.
31
Ibid, p. 193.
32
Ibid, p. 362.
30
35
36
. . :
, , . 1, . 1, ,
2014, pp. 117 133.
38
Hajrudin uri: Istorija Srpskog sokola u Sarajevu, Sarajevo, 1940, p. 10.
37
37
38
42
39
43
40
of public schools, there was Gymnastics (PE). The school even had
its own small gym where teaching of gymnastics was performed. 44
Physical Education in schools of immigrants
After 1878 occupation immigrants from Austro-Hungary
started to come to Bosnia and Herzegovina: Italians, Hungarians,
Germans (both from Austria and Germany), Polish people,
Slovakians, Ukrainians and Czech. Special schools were opened for
them, and they performed their school activities according to public
school curriculum that contained gymnastics as a subject. We found
no data claiming that the mentioned teaching was actually
performed, and in which way. But according to Jelena Dopudjas
notes, former students of those schools [] remember that they
mostly played different games, and dances with songs in German. 45
Physical Education in private primary schools
Private schools were mostly founded for children of
immigrants, and the teaching was mostly performed in Hungarian
and German language. There were also trappist, evangelistic and
other schools. Teaching of Gymnastics was not performed in those
schools. 46
Physical Education in public schools
Primary schools
:
(1463-1918), , 1965;
Jelena Dopua: Fizika kultura u kolama Bosne i Hercegovine od prvih poetaka do
1918. godine, Sarajevo, 1974; Avram Pinto gave the data to Jelena Dopudja.
45
Jelena Dopua: Fizika kultura u kolama Bosne i Hercegovine od prvih poetaka
do 1918. godine, Sarajevo, 1974, p. 37.
46
:
(1463-1918), , 1965;
Jelena Dopua: Fizika kultura u kolama Bosne i Hercegovine od prvih poetaka do
1918. godine, Sarajevo, 1974.
44
41
After occupation of Bosnia and Herzegovina AustroHungarian authorities disregarded all present schools and started to
open public schools with curriculum and books of Austrian schools,
in which Gymnastics (PE) as a subject played a significant role.
Country government by File no. 21339 from September 23rd
1880 determined the rules for opening public primary schools, and
two months later, on November 16th 1880 (File no. 28132) published
a curriculum for city primary schools. In list of subjects under no. 8
there was Gymnastics. It was planned to teach Gymnastics in all
years (I-IV), two times per week with two classes. Teaching basics
for that subjected stated:
Strength, agility, certitude, sense for
work and self-confidence should be
nourished, bright spirit and sparkle body
should be maintained. Primarily should
be considered those moves, usually light
exercises, known in the certain area, and
then usual and free exercises, according
to physical development of children. If
children are 10 years old they can also
exercise on a stand (bars, Barren),
precha, etc. 47
We could not find any sources based on which we could
conclude what teachers did during classes of that subject. In some
schools there was no marks from that subject, what brings us to a
conclusion that Gymnastics was not always performed as provided
by the curriculum. The name of the subject was not uniformed, and
in some schools it was called Gombanje and in some Gymnastics. 48
Games had a significant role in education of young people.
Perceiving the importance of games in education, Country
government on December 12th 1913 issued a rescript in which the
Zbornik zakona i naredaba 1878-1880, ponovo tampan u Slubenom dodatku
kolskog vjesnika 1894, p. 8; cited in: Jelena Dopua: Fizika kultura u kolama
Bosne i Hercegovine od prvih poetaka do 1918. godine, Sarajevo, 1974; and
. : 1918.
, ,
, 1988.
48
See more in: Jelena Dopua: Fizika kultura u kolama Bosne i Hercegovine od
prvih poetaka do 1918. godine, Sarajevo, 1974.
47
42
43
See more in: Jelena Dopua: Fizika kultura u kolama Bosne i Hercegovine od
prvih poetaka do 1918. godine, Sarajevo, 1974, pp. 94 101; Naredba Zemaljske
vlade za Bosnu i Hercegovinu, kolski glasnik, Sarajevo, 1910.
52
Cited in: Jelena Dopua: Fizika kultura u kolama Bosne i Hercegovine od prvih
poetaka do 1918. godine, Sarajevo, 1974, p. 48; See more in: Naredba Zemaljske
vlade za Bosnu i Hercegovinu, br. 53 od 29. XI 1913, Svrha; Graa za pojedine
razrede, kolski glasnik, god. 4, br. 12, Sarajevo, 1913, pp. 457 496, and Franjo
Buar: Nastavna osnova za gimnastiku u bosansko-hercegovakim srednjim kolama,
Nastavni vjesnik, Zagreb, 1915, pp. 68 70.
51
44
ones who attended congresses about gymnastics and games and the
ones who finished military gymnastic courses.
More middle schools existed and worked, and the most
prominent were: Large High School, Large Real and Small Real
High School in Sarajevo, Large High School in Mostar, Real School
in Banja Luka, Small and Large High School in Bihach, Large High
School in Downer Tuzla. Teacher schools-pretorandies (male and
female in Sarajevo, male in Mostar), Trading schools in Bjeljina,
Mostar, Travnik, Trebinje, Tuzla, etc.; Higher female schools in
Banja Luka, Mostar and Sarajevo.
In high schools, Real schools, Teachers school and Higher
female schools subject Physical Education was a part of the
curriculum, but it was named differently (gymnastics, gombanje,
body-workout) and was mostly performed by two classes per week,
in some schools one class per week (teacher schools). In all Trading
schools there was no PE as a subject, and in those schools that
practiced PE it was done for one or two classes per week.
Teaching of PE was performed by more than 30 teachers,
among whom: Svetislav Badali, Andjeo Basi, Nikola Begovi,
Viktor Beck, Nikola Bianovi, Jovan Vasi, Josip Vedral, Petar
Vojnovi, Nikola Vujii, Nikola Dui, dr Aleksandar Erich, Stevan
akula, Ivan Branislav Zoch, Luka Karaman, Nikola Kozomora,
Jovo Laki, Dimitrije Mateji, Duan Metiko, Vladimir Novak, Ivan
Farka, Emil Woska and others. We found more than ten names of
female teachers who were teaching PE: Jelica BeloviBernadikovska, Milka Bergant, Julija Dubravec, Marija Knei,
Jozefina Mateji, Persa Popovi, Ludmila Tesar, Marija Trbojevi,
Vilma Ulhir, and others.
Other middle and higher schools
Beside aforementioned schools, there were also middle and
higher confessional and private schools.
In High schools: Serbian in Sarajevo, Franciscan-high in
Siroki Brijeg and Archbishop-high in Travnik, among other subjects
45
46
REFERENCES
, :
(1463-1918), , 1965.
Buar, Franjo: Nastavna osnova za gimnastiku u bosanskohercegovakim srednjim kolama, Nastavni vjesnik,
Zagreb, 1915, pp. 68 70.
Crnogorevi, R. ivko: Memoari, za tampu priredio Milenko S.
Filipovi, Akademija nauka i umjetnosti Bosne i
Hercegovine, Sarajevo, 1966.
, :
, , 1933.
uri, Hajrudin: Istorija Srpskog sokola u Sarajevu, Sarajevo,
1940.
, :
1800 1878,
, , 1965.
Dopua, Jelena: Fizika kultura u kolama Bosne i Hercegovine od
prvih poetaka do 1918. godine, Sarajevo, 1974.
, :
50
1882 1932, ,
1932;
, : , . , , 1927.
-, : , , 1901.
Jelini, Julijan: Kultura i bosanski franjevci, knj. 2, Sarajevo, 1915.
Kalueri, Stevo: Podaci o srp-prav. kolama, Narodno jedinstvo,
ilustrovani zvanini almanah kalendar Drinske banovine
za 1932.g, Sarajevo, 1932.
, : ,
, . 24, . 11, , 1909, pp. 171 174.
Kruevac, Todor: Srpska realka gimnazija u Sarajevu, knj. 3,
Poseban otisak iz Glasnika arhiva Drutva arhivista BiH,
Sarajevo, 1963.
Naredba Zemaljske vlade za Bosnu i Hercegovinu, br. 53 od 29. XI
1913, Svrha; Graa za pojedine razrede, kolski glasnik,
god. 4, br. 12, Sarajevo, 1913, pp. 457 496.
47
48
RUSSIA
THE EMERGENCE AND HISTORY OF SPORTS
EDUCATION IN RUSSIA
Fedor
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
REFERENCES
[1] Evstafiev, B.V., Chihaev U.T. The beginning of the school
history: from the life of the first fencing school. Leningrad: VIFK,
1981.
[2] Filippova, S.O., Ponomarev, G.N. Theory and methodology
of physical culture in preschool: teaching guide. Spb.: Detstvo-press;
Moscow: TC Sfera, 2008.
[3] Gorinevsky,
V.V.
Physical
education
(1913).
http://dic.academic.ru (accessed September 15, 2014).
[4] Grantyn, K.H. Basic principles of physical education by
P.F.
Lesgaft
for
school
children.
74-88.
http://elib.gnpbu.ru/text/pamyati-lesgafta_1947/go,0;fs,1/ (accessed
September 15, 2014).
59
60
SERBIA
PHYSICAL EDUCATION TEACHING IN THE
PRIMARY SCHOOLS OF THE REPUBLIC OF
SERBIA
SlaanaMijatovi, Faculty of Sport and Physical Education,
University of Belgrade
Violeta iljak, Faculty of Management in Sport, Alfa University,
Belgrade
Correspondence
Violeta iljak
[email protected]
Phone: +381 60 3555 736
61
62
63
started coming from the western countries, the first ideas and
attempts to introduce such instruction as a compulsory subject
appeared in the Principality of Serbia.
This period included many ideas, thoughts and attempts in
relation to the introduction of physical education instruction into
primary school, starting from the moment when Serbia was granted
the right to open and establish its own schools until the Letter (act)
of the Minister of Education of 1868, which was the official
document that introduced physical education classes into primary
schools.
During these 38 years a lot of ideas and new curricula
appeared and many reforms were made within the school system as
well. In this period, four laws were adopted on the organization of
primary school, but none of those even mentioned physical
education. In addition to the laws, some special guidelines and
curricula, which further explained the implementation of curricula,
were issued but none of them included physical education as a
subject.
This means that, in the first decades of the primary school
development in the Principality of Serbia, the state authorities were
not prepared to introduce PE as a subject in primary schools.
Nevertheless, many ideas, attempts and efforts to include physical
education in school timetables among other subjects were spread by
some pedagogical workers:
1. Milovan Spasi who was the chief school manager
since 1845 wrote three books which represented specialized
literature for the primary school teachers. In one of them, published
in 1885 entitled: "Pedagogical and methodological instruction
material for the primary school teachers Milovan Spasi wrote
about physical education of children as a foremost task of parents
first and then of the teachers who should help this process through a
number of procedures and measures, such as organizing childrens
games.
2. At the proposal of the Parliament of the Principality
of Serbia, in September 1859, The Project of the Law on School for
the Principality of Serbia was designed, which also specified
physical education for male and gymnastics for female children,
among other subjects taught in primary schools. Although this law
64
Project was not adopted, it is evident that, in the late sixties, the first
attempts to officially and legally introduce the subject in schools
appeared.
3. Dr Djordje Natoevi, the principal and the
professor of Serbian grammar school in Novi Sad, the supervisor and
the manager of Serbian schools in the Serbian province of
Vojvodina, was invited in Serbia to the duty of an officer in the
Ministry of Education, where he spent a year (1867-1868). After
visiting schools throughout Serbia in his Report to the Minister of
Education he criticized the state of schools and the organization of
teaching, and in relation to physical education, he wrote: "There is
no physical education in primary schools. There is nothing that
primary schools do for the sake of its development (Archives of
Serbia, MPs, 1868, IV, 515, p. 3).
In the proposal of the curriculum he wrote that one of the
subjects should be gymnastics, which would be taught in all four
grades, from 11 am to 11.30 am and from 4 to 4.30 p.m. The content
of this subject would consist of: children's games, light military
exercises, swimming and fighting.
Based on Natoevis Report on the state of the schools in
Serbia and the Report of Stevan D. Popovi on the state of the
schools in Switzerland, the School Committee suggested that the
Minister of Education (in February 1868) open a Teacher Training
School, and to organize the course of gymnastics between the classes
in the primary schools in towns and villages.
In this period characterized by a discrepancy between
desires and actual conditions, i.e. by an inconsistency of needs and
financial possibilities of Serbia which was barely liberated, it could
not be expected the ideas of Serbian pedagogues to be accepted,
which would enable the integration of physical education teaching in
the mainstream of the European modern pedagogical thought and
contemporary teaching.
Yet, all these proposals and attempts to introduce physical
education teaching into schools represented significant efforts to find
a suitable place for this subject in the educational process, in
accordance with the achievements and the knowledge of the
European pedagogical thought.
65
66
67
68
69
70
deemed it necessary. Thus, the insight into the teachers work was
more complete, because they were controlled by both the supervisors
and the school principals and the ministerial delegates, who assessed
their work at the end of each school year.
In order to provide conditions for teaching gymnastics,
when the weather conditions did not allow practicing outside, the
Minister prescribed the Regulations on school construction and
school furniture (1899), similar to the Regulations of 1881, which
stated that larger schools, especially in towns "should also have a
hall for gymnastics and ceremonies which can be heated", of the
height of five meters at least.
In the field of physical education teaching there was a
constant need for methodological reference books so that the
"Textbook of Gymnastics" by Atanasije Popovi, published in 1898,
represented a valuable professional assistance in the work of many
teachers. Thus, it enabled this kind of teaching to be carried out at a
higher professional level.
However, despite all of this, the condition of physical
education teaching in primary schools in the last decade of the 19 th
century, according to the assessment and the opinion of the
supervisors of primary schools was not satisfactory. A lack of
funding resources for the needs of gymnastics teaching was the
actual reality of that period as well as a lack of understanding and
appreciation of the importance and the value of educational areas on
the other hand. For Serbia of that time, physical education teaching
was something superfluous, unnecessary luxury or a fad.
The curriculum (1899) changed the name of this subject
in: gymnastics and childrens games, which even more emphasized
the commitment to this program content. According to it, a greater
part of the contents whose performance required special facilities
and gymnastics equipment for physical training (exercises on
horizontal bar, uneven parallel bars, rings and various climbing
apparatus) was exempted from gymnastics instruction, and more
contents in the field of children's games were provided. Thus, the
curriculum for gymnastics teaching no longer required greater
financial investments in providing the conditions for its performance.
However, this curriculum, in its concept, was still onesided and limited the choice of means and forms of physical
exercise. Gymnastics teaching gradually turned into a field of games
71
72
73
74
75
76
school (inter-class)
municipal,
77
232-234).
78
79
b) Sources
1.
2.
80
SLOVAKIA
THE DEVELOPMENT OF SCHOOL PHYSICAL
EDUCATION IN THE TERRITORY OF
SLOVAKIA
Branislav Antala, Faculty of Physical Education and Sports,
Comenius University in Bratislava
Frantiek Seman, Faculty of Physical Education and Sports,
Comenius University in Bratislava
Natlia Smolenkov, Faculty of Physical Education and Sports,
Comenius University in Bratislava
Correspondence
Branislav Antala
[email protected]
Phone: +421 905 887575
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
SLOVENIA
ANALYSIS OF EXEMPT ABSENCES FROM
PHYSICAL EDUCATION LESSONS IN SLOVENIA
IN THE PAST AND TODAY
Gregor Jurak, Faculty of Sport, University of Ljubljana
Marjeta Kova, Faculty of Sport, University of Ljubljana
Correspondence
Gregor Jurak
[email protected]
Phone: +386 1 520 77 83
Abstract
A comparison of recommendations from 1911 curriculum
with modern legislation today revealed that in the last 100 years in
Slovenia there has been no significant professional change in
approach to exempt absences from physical education (PE) lessons.
Recommendations in the last PE curriculum have not yet found their
place in legislative practice; namely, the option to be exempt from
the entire PE subject still exists despite the contrary guidelines in
curriculum. Precise definition of procedures for exemptions and
activities, which schools organise for pupils instead, form a part of
school regulations. These regulations reveal that their authors do not
understand PE curriculum, which include both practical and
theoretical contents. A comparison between documents from 1911
and today indicates very similar formulations in contents and length
of exempt absence as well as in procedures followed in exemptions.
Furthermore, it can be noticed that although PE teachers in the old
days did not hold any formal education in comparison with doctors;
nevertheless, they had larger competency in exempting pupils and
modifying lessons than highly educated PE teachers today.
Key words: physical education, exemption, legislation,
curriculum, history, comparison
97
INTRODUCTION
As a result of various positive effects on growth and
development every young person should partake in at least one hour
of quality physical activity a day; therefore, physical education
should be organised in a way that all young people could participate
in school programmes (Hardman, 2008). Despite the media
presented stereotype about the frequency of exemptions from
physical education (PE) during adolescence, data from recent studies
in Slovenia show that approximately 0.5% of primary school and 2%
of high school pupils present medical letter of exemption (Kolar,
2010), with a third of them being short term exemptions. Pupils are
also exempt from practical PE lessons when they are at school in
other lessons; the most frequently listed reason being illness or its
consequences (Jurak, Kova, Strel and Starc, 2005a). The
introduction of more suitable procedural criteria would reduce the
frequency of such cases when pupils ask for exemption (Jurak,
Kova, Strel and Starc, 2005b).
The problem of exemptions from PE lessons is in different
countries approached in various ways, depending whether a subject
is compulsory or not, characteristics of the curricula and the
autonomy of schools; in the majority of western world countries
exemption from PE lessons is possible only with doctors letter of
exemption (Himberg et al., 2003; Pangrazi, 2001).
Slovenian primary school PE curriculum states in a chapter
Special-didactic recommendations that no pupils should be exempt
from lessons. Teachers should modify the process to the limitations
of individual pupil as the experts share an opinion that exercise can
be an important therapeutic and rehabilitation tool (Kova and
Novak, 1998, str. 55). Nevertheless, pupils in Slovenia can legally be
exempt from various types of education work due to health reasons.
Exemptions can be granted for the entire or only a part of the subject
and for short or long periods of time.
Always interesting problem of exemptions led the authors in
the present study to analyse recommendations from 1911 curriculum
for gymnasia and real-gymnasia and then compare them with
98
99
100
8.
9.
101
102
BETWEEN
1911 AND
Incidence of guidelines
In 1911, the guidelines on exempt absences were written at
the end of curriculum as instructions or nowadays called didactic
103
104
105
can be due to health reasons exempt from practical lessons but not
from theoretical contents, which form an important part of lessons.
Over hundred years, there are no significant differences
noticed in participation at individual lessons, as documents in both
periods state that the organisation of individual lessons and inclusion
of partially exempt pupil is the autonomy of a teacher. School
practice also indicates different understanding of a term partial
exemption. Regulations in both primary and high school do not
allow a PE teacher to judge independently how to treat a pupil who
is partially exempt, but rather has to acquire doctors guidelines and
act accordingly. In such cases, it is necessary for a doctor and PE
teacher to cooperate in treatment of individual pupil.
Legislation today is empowering parents to write a letter of
absence for absences lasting less than five days. Similarly, doctors
should add opinion and recommendation for PE teacher on the letter
of absence, however in practice this is most often not a case (Jurak et
al., 2005b). PE teacher has to unconditionally respect doctors letter
with guidelines due to health reasons, whereas in cases when pupil
presents a letter from parents, he can decide on modification of
practice according to his professional competencies. Parents or
pupils can only subjectively and with professional limitations detect
justification for absence from physical activity due to health reasons,
as they are not aware of the ways a teacher can adapt the practice to
temporarily limited abilities of pupils (e.g. feeling sick).
As in the past, PE teacher nowadays also has to record
absences and types of letters of absence, although they do not need
to be presented to the headmaster. In both studied cases, guidelines
state that teachers should during and after the illness consider the
condition of a pupil and doctors guidelines. At least some of the
listed illnesses from hundred years ago are today not present
anymore, the role of a teacher in detecting illnesses in pupils was
emphasised hundred years ago.
106
CONCLUSION
Analysis of recommendations about exempt absences from
physical activity in 1911 and legislation as well as didactic
recommendations in PE curriculum today indicate that in hundred
years there have been no significant changes. It can be also noticed
that the role of a PE teacher is today lesser than a century ago.
Modern school legislation defines that a pupil can similarly to
hundred years ago be entirely exempt from educational work due to
the health reasons, which is contradictory to the recommendations of
PE curriculum and the guidelines from health organisations, stating
that movement can be a suitable tool of rehabilitation and
prevention.
Similarly to hundred years ago, pupils can in PE be exempt
entirely or only partially (some contents only), depending on the
doctors certificate. Entirely exempt absence is also in contradiction
with curriculum, which defines that pupils in PE lessons in addition
to practical learn also theoretical contents. As a result, dealing with
pupil in PE lessons according to the existing regulations is
controversial. Both regulations for primary and high school define
that primary schools can organise supplementary activity for a pupil
who could not perform any tasks, whereas high school can include a
pupil exempt for health reasons into another activity. Health letter of
exemption namely define absence from practical lessons and not also
from theoretical parts, which form an important part of both primary
and high school PE curricula.
As a doctor had to write a diagnosis on a health letter of
exemption, it is incomprehensive but not infrequent today that PE
teacher does not know about a chronic illness of a pupil. In these
cases, parents have to be aware of the risk and responsibility for
potential negative reactions of pupil to practical lessons.
It has to be warned about the occasional practice when pupils
bring health letter of exemption for the entire academic year at the
end of the year (particularly in high school). Regulations namely
precisely define that a semi-annual or annual health letter of
107
108
109
SPAIN
PHYSICAL EDUCATION AND SPORT IN
CONTEXTS OF DEMOCRATISATION: THE
CASE OF SPAIN DURING THE POLITICAL
TRANSITION (1975-1982)
Sixte Abadia i Naud, Blanquerna Faculty of Psychology,
Education and Sport Sciences, Ramon Llull University
Enric Maria Sebastiani i Obrador, Blanquerna Faculty of
Psychology, Education and Sport Sciences, Ramon
Llull University
Correspondence
110
111
112
113
them, but these teachers also lack the right degrees (Tarn, 1977, 2)
also revealed the need to consider establishing degrees that would
bring these professionals status in line with that of their counterparts
in other disciplines.
Indeed, from 1977 to 1978, the field of physical education
was characterised by increased claims by professionals for better
regulation of the sector and for agreements on this matter reached
with the public administration. Thus, in March 1977 an association
of physical education professionals was established which did not
work at odds with the National College of Physical Education
Teachers (Colegio Nacional de Profesores de la Educacin Fsica)
but instead went further by asking this subject to depend on the
Ministry of Education and Science instead of on the General
Secretariat of Movement (Secretara General del Movimiento), as it
did then, as well as this Ministrys recognition of the degree and
salary parity with the other teachers. Its bylaws were approved by the
Council of Ministers on the 3rd of November 1978 under the name of
the Official College of Physical Education Teachers (Colegio Oficial
de Profesores de Educacin Fsica).
As we shall see below, as Law 13/1980, the General Law on
Physical Culture and Sport was being drafted, once again the
teachers and students at the INEF in Barcelona and Madrid called for
improvements in the job status of physical education professionals.
Therefore, Spanish citizens witnessed how not many
changes took place in the early years of the transition, nor did the
transformations needed to overcome the shortcomings that would
make possible massive participation in sport and the ideal conditions
for high-quality physical education. Even though there were changes
in the discourses and political positions around these matters,
Spanish citizens would have to wait until the second half of the
transition for a clear sport policy to get underway, one that therefore
signalled a break with the previous approaches.
The regulation of physical education and sport in Spain, a slow
road towards normalisation begun during the political transition
(1978-1982)
Two of the most important milestones towards promoting
and regulating sport and physical education were the approval of the
114
115
116
13/1980, dated the 31st of March 1980, the General Law on Physical
Culture and Sport). It also made sport for all a priority in general
sport policy. This text was the first attempt to change the structures
of Spanish sport (Puig, 1993, 98) and its main points included the
compulsory nature of physical education at different levels of
education, the organisation and competences of the CSD and the
Spanish Olympic Committee (COE), the assignment of no less than
22% of total proceeds from Mutual Sport-Charity Wagers to the
CSD, university status for the National Institutes of Physical
Education (INEF) and the declaration of the principle of
decentralisation in the government organisation to promote sport.
This last principle formed the underpinning of the actions of the
autonomous communities, the provincial councils and the island and
municipal councils (Pastor, 2000). Regarding the status of physical
education, the months prior to the approval of the law were tinged
with controversy since the teachers and students at the INEF in
Madrid (1967) and Barcelona (1975) believed that the status of
professionals in this field was not fully enough specified, nor were
the possibilities of accessing and converting degrees (Calatayud,
2002). Beyond the aforementioned law, some progress was made in
physical education and the status of professionals in this sector
during the transition, such as the creation of the Official College of
Physical Education Teachers (RD 2957/1978) and the approval of
Royal Decree 790/1981 on National Physical Education Institutes
and the education they provide.
Thus, the last years of the political transition were important
in the regulation of physical education and sport in Spain, forming
the peak of the democratisation of sport, which also came hand in
hand with a process of decentralisation and the assumption of
responsibility for sport matters by the autonomous communities,
provinces and municipalities of Spain.
Conclusions
Most of the organisational and structural changes in Spanish
sport came during the first few years after the dictatorship, and
despite the paltry progress in the statuses of physical education and
sport in the country during this period, they were extraordinarily
important in consolidating democracy and the process of expanding
117
118
119
120
TURKEY
HISTORY OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION IN
TURKEY
Giyasettin Demirhan, Faculty of Sport Sciences, Hacettepe
University, Ankara
Ferman Konukman, College of Arts and Sciences, Sport Science
Program, Qatar University, Doha
Correspondence
Giyasettin Demirhan
[email protected]
Phone: 90 532 382 5352
Abstract
The purpose of this study is to review the historical
development of physical education in Turkey up to modern times. In
the process, beginning from the Ottoman Empire to the Republic of
Turkey, the early physical education courses were offered in Military
High School in 1864 and in Navy High Schools since 1884.
Application of physical education courses into other program areas.
Teacher education accelerated by the foundation of the young
Turkish Republic. The first course to train physical education
teachers was offered at apa Girls Teacher Training School in
Istanbul in 1926. In 1932 Gazi Teacher Training School and Terbiye
Institution Physical Education Training branch were established in
Ankara. Recently, more than 70 higher education institutions have
begun providing such services. Physical education courses at
primary, secondary and higher education levels are being offered
two-five hours weekly including extra curricular activities such as
scouting and sport organizations among the schools.
Key Words: Physical education, physical education teacher
education.
121
122
123
124
125
Picture 2: Selim Sirri Tarcan, Inge Neiman, Rangar Johonson, Suen Alexanderson
and Women Gymnastics Teachers
126
127
Conclusion
When it comes to physical education and physical education
teachers, physical education activities, which will support the health
and holistic development of children and adolescents, and make
them happy as well as healthy, should be carefully designed, and
highly qualified physical education teachers should be educated in
their profession. Therefore, when children and young people
participate to the daily physical education in school regularly, they
will become a physically educated people. This is important because
physically-educated person has learnt the necessary skills for certain
physical activities, is physically fit, participates in and enjoys
physical education skills, knows the importance and advantages of
participating in physical activities, cares healthy life style,
understands the contribution of physical education to personal and
social development, and takes individual and social responsibility
during the physical education lessons. In this context, the estimation
of future physical education and PETE programs to be conducted are
given below:
128
129
REFERENCES
Abali, A. (1974). Cumhuriyetimizin 50. yilinda genclik ve spor
(Sport and youth in 50th Republic of Turkey). Ankara: T.
C. Genclik ve Spor Bakanligi.
Aray, S. (1959). Bir Galatasarayli'nin hatiralari (The memories of a
Galatasaray supporter). Izmir.
Asir, V. (1950). "Selim Sirri Tarcan". Dost goz ile 75 yasinda genc
Selim Sirri Tarcan. (Selim Sirri Tarcan who is 75 years
old young). Istanbul: Ulku Basimevi, 53-71.
August 2012).
Bilge, N. (1988). Turkiye'de beden egitimi ogretmeninin
yetistirilmesi. (Physical education teacher training in
Turkey). Ankara: Kultur Bakanligi Yayinlari.
Brickman, W.W. (1984-85). The Turkish cultural and educational
revolution: John Deweys report of 1924.
Eastern
European Education, 16, (4), 3-18.
Bursalioglu, Z. (1991). Turkey. handbook of world education : A
comparative guide to higher education and educational
systems of the world. (Ed. W.Wickremasinghe). Houston:
American Collegiate Service.
Dagli, N. & Akturk, B. (1988). Hukumetler ve programlari (Turkish
governments and their programmes). Ankara: T.B.M.M.
Basimevi.
Demirhan, G. & Sacli, F. (2013). Physical education in Turkey in the
context of society with the culture of
movement,
Physical education and health global perspectives and
best practice (Eds. M.K. Chin & C.R. Edginton). Urbana:
Sagamore Publishing, 441-450.
Guven, O. (1996). Turkiye'de Cumhuriyet doneminde beden egitimi
ve spor ogretmeni yetistiren okullarin egitimini hazirlayan
calismalar (Preparing studies on education for training
schools of physical education and sports teachers during
the period of declaration of Turkish Republic). Journal of
Physical Education and Sport Sciences, 1(2), 70-81.
http://www.aahperd.org/naspe/standards/nationalStandard
s/PETEstandards.cfm (Access date: 17
Kahraman, A. (1995). Osmanli devletinde spor (Sport in the
Ottoman Empire). Ankara: Kultur Bakanligi Yayinlari.
130
131
132
UKRAINE
HISTORICAL OVERVIEW OF THE
DEVELOPMENT OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION IN
UKRAINE
Sergii Ivashchenko, National University of the Physical Education
and Sport of Ukraine
Correspondence
Sergii Ivashchenko
[email protected]
133
the same time, in rural areas of Ukraine were organized many special
sports courses and voluntary sports associations.
In the period from 1912 to 1930 in many regions of Ukraine
was spread so-called movement "Ukrainian scouts", which, in
principle, has much in common with the movement of "Scouts" in
other countries (Butyrskaya I., 2004).
In February 1917 was formed the Ukrainian National
Republic. Since that time, there were significant changes in the
system of education of the population, including a system of physical
training all his age (Andreeva A., & Krutzevich T., 2004).
In Kiev It was created a first national school of physical
education. The main purpose of this school was to provide education,
from the earliest childhood, physically strong young generation with
the harmonic development of physical and spiritual strength.
This required the full promotion of all kinds of mass sports
and physical education, particularly in schools and other educational
institutions, as well as engaging in physical culture movement of the
broad masses of the population, especially the youth.
In Kiev in 1963 was held a scientific conference on physical
culture and sports of all age groups. One of the major problems of
this event was to study physical education and recreation as a means
to combat premature aging (Yaremenko A., 2005).
In this period of time many professionals, working in the field
of physical education, work hard to promote the popularization of
physical culture among people of different age groups and teach
them a correct understanding of the importance of physical exercise.
In addition, their efforts are focused on the development of tourism,
as an extremely exciting and versatile sports activity, which affects
all aspects of human life: physical, moral, aesthetic and labor (Hodge
K., & Smellie L., 2008).
134
1914 - 1915
1926 - 1927
1927 - 1928
1928 - 1929
1929 - 1930
1930 - 1931
1931 - 1932
Primary
schools
Secondary
schools
Total
number
19361
16713
17832
17487
17944
17496
13191
356
2066
2531
2958
3390
5845
8231
19717
18779
20363
20445
21334
23341
21422
135
136
Boys
Girls
100 meters
500 meters
1000 meters
Long jump from the takeoff
High jump from the takeoff
Pulling from a hanging position
Climbing rope (gymnastic stick)
Grenade throwing 700 g
Cross-country skiing
15sec.
17 sec.
3 min. 50 sec.
3 70 sm
110 sm
5 times
30 m
5 km for 40
min.
50 m
1 km
3m
100 sm
3
20 m
3 km for 28
min.
1 km
Running
137
138
I year
250
100
130
135
122
100
837
II
year
258
90
126
81
97
45
697
III
year
140
126
67
68
85
35
521
IV
year
96
88
79
73
78
38
452
Total
744
404
402
357
382
218
2507
139
140
4 - 10 classes
91,8 %
6,8 %
1,4 %
78,6 %
14,7 %
6,7 %
141
142
REFERENCES
Andreeva A., & Krutzevich T. (2004). Analysis of motivational
theories in improving physical education and recreation
Theory and Methods Physical Education and sport, 26
(2), 81 84.
Butyrskaya I. (2004). Features of the health for pupils middle and
high school age at the boarding schools. Kiyv, Ukraine:
Olympic literature.
Glazyrin D. (2003). Foundations of differentiated physical
education. Cherkassy: Vidlunnja-plus.
Guba V. (2008). Scientific-practical and methodical bases of
physical education for young students. M: Sovetskiy
Sport.
Hodge K., & Smellie L. (2008). Motivation in masters sport:
Achievement and social goals. Physiology of Sport and
Exercise, 9(1),157 176.
Kalinichenko I. (2009). The state of children health in educational
institutions with different modes for organized physical
activity. Kiyv, Ukraine: Olympic literature.
Pavlova Y. & Tulaydan V. (2012). Physical activity quality of life
for first and second year students. Young sport science of
Ukraine, 12(3), 92 99.
Sukharev A. (1991). Health and physical education of children and
teenagers. Moscow: Medicine.
Vydrin V. & Pleshakov A. (2005) Physical education as a cultural
phenomenon of the individual and society. Physical
Culture and Health, 8(2), 23 37.
Yaremenko A. (2005). Physical education as an indispensable
component of a healthy lifestyle of young people. K.:
Zdorovya.
143
UNITED KINGDOM
PHYSICAL EDUCATION IN ENGLAND
Ken Hardman (Emeritus Professor), Institute of Sport and Exercise
Science, University of Worcester
Gillian Parry, Physical Education Consultant
Correspondence
Ken Hardman
[email protected]
Phone: 0044 (0)1457854262
Introduction
The history of physical education in England reveals
influences variously shaped by military, political, economic, social,
cultural, philosophical and pedagogical factors fostered either by
individuals or institutions. Essentially, school physical education in
England has evolved out of two (dual) traditions: organised games
and competitive sports associated with Public Schools1 (that is
Independent or Private Boarding Schools); and physical training
associated initially with military drill and then Swedish therapeutic
gymnastics in the Ling tradition in State Elementary Schools from
1871 on.
Shaping Traditions
Developments in sport as an important component of the
physical education curriculum are inextricably linked with
antecedents in English mainly Independent (Boarding) Schools in the
19th century. Though not exclusively so, these institutions for the
sons (and later daughters) of the privileged laid down enduring
foundations. Initially sporting activity was encouraged to structure
boys leisure as an antidote to ill-discipline, immorality and general
anti-social conduct, i.e. as a form of social control. This was an early
For purposes of clarity, Public Schools are generically referred to as Independent
schools. As such they can also be distinguished from schools provided by the State.
144
145
146
Thus began the battle of the two systems with Roth fervently
lobbying Army, Government and Government Boards, Royal
Commissions, School Boards, politicians and Her Majestys
Inspectors of Schools (HMIs) by alluding to comparative situations
in Sweden, Prussia, Switzerland, Russia and France and pointing out
that the neglect of physical education and hygiene within the English
education system was the principal cause in the decline in the
general health of the nation. Roths vociferous arguments heralded
the addition of medical health and social welfare to factors shaping
developments in physical education. At the time of the FrancoPrussian War, the early post-Forster Education Act (Elementary
Education Act, 1870) introduced non-denominational State Schools
with bye-laws requiring attendance of children aged 5-13. An
Amendment to the Act in 1871 permitted the inclusion of drill in
the curriculum. These initial 'physical education' programmes reflected
methods utilised by the Army; indeed in the last thirty years of the 19th
century, part-time ex-army, non-commissioned personnel taught much
of the permitted 'military drill' syllabus.
The Swedish case was enhanced by London School Board
invitations to Concordia Lfving in 1878 and Martina Bergman
(later Bergmann-Osterberg) in 1881 to develop training programmes
for elementary school teachers. Bergmann-Osterberg was instrumental
in founding courses at Hampstead (1885) and then a two-year Course
for Women teachers at Dartford in 1895. Her disciples' subsequently
fostered a number of Women's Training Colleges (Anstey in
Birmingham, Bedford, Chelsea, I.M. Marsh in Liverpool, Maria Grey
and Whitelands in London, Girton and Newnham in Cambridge),
graduates of which placed female physical educators at the forefront of
developments in England. By 1888, the government established Cross
Commission in seeking a safe and scientific system of physical
training reported against elaborate gymnastics apparatus (associated
with German gymnastics): physical exercises, largely comprising,
gymnastics and 'Swedish drill' came to be included in the curriculum
from 1890 on - the bottom line was that Swedish gymnastics was
financially cheap! Economic realities were a significant influence in
the adoption of the Swedish system: large numbers of children could
experience drilled exercise with minimal facility or equipment
147
148
After a series of mergers with other bodies, the Ling Physical Education Association
became the lead national professional body in 1994 when it was renamed the Physical
Education Association of the United Kingdom; it now has the name of the Association
for Physical Education.
149
150
151
Interestingly the only compulsory subject legally required up to this time was
Religious Studies/Education.
152
153
154
155
156
Swimming activities and water safety had to be chosen as one of these areas of
activity unless pupils had completed the full key stage 2 teaching requirements in
relation to swimming activities and water safety during key stage 1. The National
Curriculum specified that pupils should be able to swim unaided at least 25 metres.
157
158
159
2004) of all pupils taking part in a further two to three hours of sport
beyond school by 2010.
Prior to the introduction of the PESSCL strategy, Specialist
Sports Colleges (SSCs) had already evolved as a concept and some
had been established. Originally they were conceived by the
Conservative government in the early 1990s and then adopted and
expanded by the succeeding Labour government to provide
opportunities for educational centres of excellence initially in
Technology, Arts and Languages, later extended to include Sport.
The first SSCs were designated in 1996. Each school developed its
own special ethos and worked with others to spread best practice and
raise standards. Once granted, specialist status was subject to reapplication after four years to maintain status. The SSCs were
intended to have an extended school day, improved coaching,
improved facilities and to work closely with neighbouring Secondary
Schools as well as establish links with feeder Primary Schools,
through Sports Co-ordinator appointments and designated Link
Primary teachers. They were well resourced and were seen by
government as central to sport strategy in terms of talent
development. Practices varied: some SSCs emphasised broad
participatory models, others followed more narrow and selected
activities models; some developed positive relations with feeder
schools, whereas others neglected links because of time/distance
constraints.
SSCs were involved in partnerships of families of schools.
These so-termed School Sport Coordinator Partnerships collectively
served to enhance sports opportunities for all. The Partnerships were
made up of clusters of a Specialist Sports College, up to eight
secondary schools and around 45 Primary or Special Schools. Each
Partnership received a grant of up to 270,000 each year to cover
costs of a full-time Partnership Development Manager, the release
of one teacher from each Secondary School for two days a week to
take on the role of School Sport Coordinator, the release of one
teacher from each Primary or Special School for 12 days a year to
become Link Teachers and employment of Specialist Link Teachers
to fill the gaps created by teacher release. The Partnerships'
160
PESSYP had ten work Strands as follows: Club Links, Coaching, Competition,
Continuing Professional Development, Disability, Extending Activities, Gifted and
Talented, Infrastructure, Leadership and Volunteering, and Swimming.
161
The then Labour Governments aim was for every child to have a chance of
fulfilling their potential by reducing education failure, ill health, substance misuse and
neglect, crime and anti-social behaviour. Five outcomes were specified: being healthy,
staying safe, enjoying and achieving, making a positive contribution and economic
well-being. Physical Education and School Sport were deemed to contribute to a
greater or lesser extent in all areas.
162
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
163
164
165
166
167
In 1930, the Board of Education had decided that it was not desirable that physical
education should be taught by those whose qualification was limited to physical
training. The Carnegie course was only open to those with a teachers certificate or a
degree.
168
The Association for Physical Education (formally launched in March 2006 after a
merger of the PE Association UK and British Association of Advisors and Lecturers
in PE) is recognised by the DfES and its agencies, DCMS, Sport England and NGBs
etc., as the lead professional association. The Association meets its mission objectives
through lobbying government, publications including a members journal (Physical
Education Matters), a research-oriented journal (Physical Education and Sport
Pedagogy), regular electronic updates of professional development initiatives,
production of resource packs, establishment of good practice benchmarks (e.g.
Standards for Safeguarding and Protecting Children in Sport), involvement in
professional development programmes and courses as well as an annual conference. In
July 2006, it launched the National College for Continuing Professional Development,
which aims to provide leadership in physical education, raise professional standards
and share exemplary practice
169
120 Primary Schools, 110 Secondary Schools and 7 Special Schools were inspected
170
171
Concluding Comments
Physical Education in England has made significant progress
since its 19th century antecedent foundations. In the early years the
concern was for the immediate health and fitness of the nation and
the emphasis was on training the physical in State Elementary
Schools and the cult of 'Athleticism' for the privately educated rich
elite. From the early decades of the 20th century, when most of the
initiatives were discipline and short-term fitness related, Physical
Education in English schools has developed from a narrowly defined
teacher directed subject to its current position of orientation to pupilcentred learning, with an accent on learning 'how to learn', healthfocused physical education, links with other subject areas, development
of assessment procedures and partnership schemes with the local
community. The progression has been variously marked by the
172
173
174
175
REFERENCES
Bailey, R. , Armour, K. , Kirk, D. , Jess, M. , Pickup, I. , Sandford,
R. , Pearce, G., and BERA Physical Education and Sport
Pedagogy Special Interest Group, (2009). The educational
benefits claimed for physical education and school sport:
an academic review. Research Papers in Education, 24
(1). pp.1-27.
Board of Education (1902). Model Course of Training. London,
HMSO.
Board of Education (1903). Annual Report, 1902-3.London, HMSO.
pp.11-12.
Board of Education (1904). Circular 454. Board of Education.
Board of Education (1936). Circular 1445. London, HMSO.
Board of Education, (1909). The Syllabus of Physical Exercises for
Schools. London, HMSO.
Board of Education, (1919). Syllabus of Physical Training for Schools.
London, HMSO.
Board of Education, (1933). Syllabus of Physical Training. London,
HMSO.
Board of Education. (1942). McNair Report on the supply, training
and recruitment of teachers. London, HMSO.
Caborn, R. (2004), DCMS Agenda, www.teachernet.gov.uk .
Cross Commission (1888). Final Report of the Commissioners
appointed to inquire into the Elementary Education Acts,
England and Wales. London.
DCMS document Creating a Sporting Habit for Life. A New
Youth Sport Legacy Jeremy Hunt , Secretary of State for
Culture, Olympics Media and Sport.
Department for Education and Skills and Department of Culture,
Media and Sport (2004). High Quality PE and Sport for
Young People. Annesley, DfES Publications..
Department for Education/Welsh Office, (1995). Physical Education in
the National Curriculum. London, H.M.S.O.
Department of Education and Science, (1972). Movement - Physical
Education in the Primary Years. London, H.M.S.O.
Department of Education and Science, (1983). 9-13 Middle Schools
An Illustrative Survey. London, HMSO.
176
177
Stead, R., & Neville, M., (2010). The Impact of Physical Education
and Sport on Education Outcomes: A Review of
Literature. Institute of Youth Sport, Loughborough
University.
The Sports Council (1997). England, the Sporting Nation. London,
The Sports Council.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
AfPE (2006), Newsletter. 3, July.
Department for Education (2011). The Framework for the National
Curriculum A Report by the Expert Panel for the
National Curriculum Review. London, HMSO. December.
Department for Education and Employment (2014). Physical
Education. The National Curriculum for England KS 1-4.
London, HMSO.
Department for Education and Science/Welsh Office, (1992). Physical
Education in the National Curriculum. London, H.M.S.O.
Department for Education and Skills (2005). The Results of the
2004/05 School Sport Survey, Annesley, DfES
Publications, September.
Department for Education and Skills and Department of Culture,
Media and Sport (2004). Learning through PE and Sport.
Annesley, DfES Publications.
Department for Education November (2010). The Importance of
Teaching. The Schools White Paper. London, HMSO.
Department of Education (2013). Physical Education programmes of
study: Key stages 1 and 2 National Curriculum in
England, Department of Education Physical Education
programmes of study: Key stages 3 and 4 National
Curriculum in England. London, HMSO. September.
Ofsted (2006). Ofsted Strategic Plan 2006-2007. Ofsted, May.
Ofsted (2013). Evidence of PE and Sport in Schools. Ofsted. June.
Ofsted (2013). Inspecting primary school PE and school sport: new
funding. Ofsted, September.
Ofsted (2014). Physical education survey visits. Supplementary
subject-specific guidance for inspectors on making
178
179
COLOMBIA
PHYSICAL EDUCATION TEACHER TRAINING
SCHOOLS IN LATIN AMERICA: GENESIS
Luis Felipe Contecha Carrillo, Research Group ESPARTACUS,
University of Tolima, History International Section
FIEP
Correspondence
Luis Felipe Contecha Carrillo
[email protected]
Abstract
This article accounts for the beginnings of the teacher
training schools in some countries in Latin America. This document
is a result of visiting Institutions and having personal interviews with
a group of Physical Education PE Professors. It is aimed to
specifically register the antecedents and processes that originated the
institutionalization of the profession: PE teacher.
CHILE
Referring to the history of the Teacher Training School in
Chile, is to journey back in time, in an itinerary that starts in The
Central Institute at Stockholm and to chronologically locate in the
year 1889, in which Joaquin Cabezas G., travelled to Europe in his
study mission, (1936, pg. 404), as he claimed in 1936 in his speech
for the celebration of the 30 years of the institute and his 50 of
service as an educator.
Consequently with what has been said, and with the
importance of the primary source, in this case, the speech published
in the magazine of the Institute, was taken, to write this quick glance
to the creation of the Institute of P.H in Chile.
Professor Cabezas had a scholarship to study in Europe, his
first period lasted four years; in his return to Chile in 1893, he
understood and spread his knowledge, pointing out the necessity of
180
181
was the principal of the Institute until 1928 when he quit after
realizing his ideas did not meet the ones of the new direction created.
The category of Higher Institution was recovered with the
reform of 1931, when the Institute turned into a dependence of the
General Direction of Physical Education and the Council of Higher
Physical Education of the Ministry of War; by then, and for the
request of the President of the Republic Arturo Alesaadri, Professor
Joaquin Cabezas was principal again.
University of Chile
In 1932, after removing the Superior Council and the
General Direction of Physical Education, the Institute integrated to
the School of Philosophy and Sciences of Education of the
University of Chile, From then on, it was called Physical Education
Institute.
In this phase of the Institute, Professor Cabezas does well
retirement and delegates as Director, Doctor and Professor of P.E
Luis Bisquertt Susarte, graduate teacher from the Institute in 1919.
(Guarda, 2006. Pg. 19).
In 1981 the University status got lost again, which was gain
again in 1936, when the Metropolitan University of Sciences of
Education was created.
ARGENTINA
Antecedents of Teacher Training
Romero, E., when referring to the origins, says, the
Institute was finally, the forced crowning by that ideological
evolution in the European environment of the time, carried then,
from time ago, in our country (1938, Pg. 41); he claims that mainly,
the influences came from the French, especially Lagranges ideas
and the implantation of the English sports in the Educational places.
It was the Colegio Nacional de Corrientes, directed in 1890
by Principal Fitz Simn, where the seed was planted, of what was
going to be, the Institutionalization of the Physical Education in
Argentina; Professor Tomas Reeve was hired to teach outdoor sport
games, as well as, light tool gymnastics. Pablo Pizzurno, was allied
182
183
184
185
186
187
stadiums, and for the organization of sport events in all the places in
the country3.
The first course for teachers was motivated for the urgent
need of giving fulfilment to the Law 80 of 1925. The Colombian
State had hired the services of German Professor Hans Hubers, who
as head of the P.E. section, was in charge of teaching courses, he
also was in charge of the celebration of the Olympiad during four
years. These Olympiads were the first movement that later would
build the organization of National Olympiads and the passing to the
National Games that are celebrated today. Nevertheless, Hans
Hubers, was not heard by the government of the time and as an
urgent recommendation in his report, he suggested the necessity of
preparing Specialized Teachers.
Forero narrated how initially, the Swedish school product of
Chilean work influenced PE in Colombia 4. So in August 1936, 180
people, among them, professors, lieutenants and police officers,
registered to the first course of P.E. training programmed by the
National Direction of Physical Education. The course was guided
between May 11 and September 5. The National Ministry of
Education and the Chilean mission, gave them the title of trainers of
gymnastics5
This first step to the training and instruction gave birth to
the National Institute of Physical Education NIPE, which was
created through Decree 1528, 25 June 1936, and depended from the
National Direction of P.E. its first principal was the Chilean
Candelario Seplveda La Fuente. The Colombian president of the
time was Alfonso Lpez Pumarejo6.
The conditions for entering to NIPE were:
For deepening the information, see: VACA H ngel H. Historia de la Educacin
Fsica Colombiana a travs de sus Normas. Bogot, 1987.
4
Forero Nougues, In interview said, Agustin Nieto Caballero met professor Joaqun
Cabezas who was pupil of Per Henry Ling. In his return to Colombia, he asks him to
come to Colombia too, but because of his age, he recommends Candelario Sepulveda
as leader of the Chilean mission and Ramn Quintana as his assessor.
5
The clases carried out were about Anatomy, Philosophy, Chemistry, Nutrition
Sociology, and Gymnastics.
6
Leads the Liberals to power after almost fifty years in the opposition. He starts in
Colombia a campaign of renewing and changing, under the slogan The revolution in
March at the moment of creating NIPE, the minister of education was Educacin
Daro Echanda Olaya (1897-1989)
3
188
First Graduates of NIPE: Ana Mara Chvez P, Gilma Wills O, Rita Perdomo, Elisa
Gaviria, Rosa Cubillos, Josefina Chvez S, Carlos Arias, Justo Pealosa, Alberto
Rendn, Enrique Vargas, Luis E Snchez y Miguel Garca.
189
190
organization of courses of improvement. The law also regulated the requirements for
being accepted like age (between 17 and 30 years old) minimum height 1.65 mts.
191
192
193
194
195
REFERENCES
Boletin de Educacin Fsica. Ao III-N9. (1936). Instituto de
Educacin Fsica de la Unive CHILE 2003 060.jpgrsidad
d CHILE 2003 060.jpge Chile. Santiago de Chile.
Boletn de Educacin Fsica. Ao I-N1. (1934). Instituto de
Educacin Fsica de la Universidad de Chile. Santiago de
Chile.
Callejas, A. (2008) Breve Historia de la Educacin Fsica en Bolivia
(1900-1981) recuperado de http://www.efdeportes.com/
Revista Digital - Buenos Aires - Ao 13 - N 127 Diciembre de 2008
Chvez, R. (2012) Historia de la Educacin Fsica en Mxico.
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HISTORY of Physical Education in Europe. 2 / [editors Petar D.
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... et al.]. - Leposavi : University of Pristina, Faculty of Sport and
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Tira 100. - Napomene i bibliografske reference uz tekst. Bibliografija
uz svaki rad.
ISBN 978-86-82329-53-4 (FSPE)
ISBN 978-86-82329-54-1 (niz)
a) - - -
COBISS.SR-ID 218578444
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