History and Philosophy of Physical Education and Sport-X2023bbq
History and Philosophy of Physical Education and Sport-X2023bbq
History and Philosophy of Physical Education and Sport-X2023bbq
FIRST EDITION
Nancy Kane
SUNY — Cortland
SAN DIEGO
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Prefacexiii
Acknowledgments1
v
Sports and Agricultural Societies 19
Physical Activity and Self-Expression 19
Summary20
Figure Credits 21
References21
vi CONTENTS
Examples of Non-Western Sport in the Ancient World 49
The Mesoamerican Ball Game 49
Sport in Ancient Japanese Society 50
Sport in Ancient China 51
Sports in Ancient India 52
Sport and Pastimes in Ancient Egypt 53
Summary54
Figure Credits 55
References56
CONTENTS vii
Approaching Revolution: The Founding Fathers, Physical
Education, and Sport 84
Female Physical Activity in Colonial America 85
Summary86
Figure Credits 87
References88
viii CONTENTS
Chapter 9. An Overview of Sporting Activities: 1800–1950 128
Key Terms and Concepts 128
Guiding Questions 128
Introduction129
From Fairs to Frontiers: Competitions and Work-Sports 130
Percussive Dance 131
Immigrants and Sport 132
Slaves and Sport 133
Organized Sports 134
Amateur Athletics, 1800–1950 135
Professional Athletics, 1800–1950 137
Intercollegiate Sports 141
Summary143
Figure Credits 144
References145
Chapter 11. International Sport and Dance in the 21st Century 172
Key Terms and Concepts 172
Guiding Questions 172
CONTENTS ix
Introduction173
International Sports Organizations 174
World Dance Traditions 179
Summary182
Figure Credits 184
References184
x CONTENTS
Professional Codes of Ethics in Kinesiology:
What Will Be Expected of Me? 210
Implications of Ethics 211
Summary212
Figure Credits 214
References 214
CONTENTS xi
The Future in the History and Philosophy of
Physical Education and Sport 243
Summary244
Figure Credits 246
References246
INDEX271
xii CONTENTS
PREFACE
Kinesiology, or exercise science, has relatively recent origins in the academic world.
While health and forms of exercise have been studied since ancient times, specialized
kinesiology departments in higher education are really a latter-20th-century
phenomenon. When those departments were established, classes could be divided
fairly easily into three types: lecture, lab, and activity. Those designations still exist, but
teaching methods and expectations in the information age have evolved dramatically.
When kinesiology began to establish itself as an entity related to, yet separate from,
physical education studies, there was still an understanding among academics that for
every hour spent in a class, a student was expected to spend two to three hours outside of
class on reading, reviewing, and working on assignments for that class. That expectation
persists among faculty: among students, not so much. Rising higher education costs
force many students to work while attending school, and for student athletes, their
sports commitments require many hours each day and often on weekends for training
and competition. Rare is the student in any degree program who can spend six to nine
hours per week on one class, when course loads of up to 18 or more credits are carried
in a semester.
Furthermore, today’s students have not been brought up to learn in the way that
students learned in the past. Straight lecture delivery combined with rote memorization
of voluminous texts still works for some students, but many students need different
learning modes, and some need special accommodations to address specific needs.
Smart classrooms are the norm, and students are at ease in the digital environment.
Bright, capable, inquisitive students literally hold much of the world’s knowledge in
the palms of their hands, though they may need guidance in selecting and evaluating
sources of information.
However, the amount of information students need to learn does not diminish
over time, and the study of history and philosophy often involves heavy reading and
writing. There are certain things that every student of sports-related curricula should
know about the past, and a basic grounding in relevant philosophy is essential to good
practice for future teachers, clinicians, researchers, and health care providers. How can
we reconcile the demands of the subject matter with the realities of today’s educational
environment and today’s students? Must we compromise standards to compete in what,
in some respects, has become a consumer-driven industry?
xiii
The answer is no, we do not need to compromise standards. We may, however, need to change
expectations and methods of delivery. The textbook is an important tool, and a foundation of
class work. It is a guide, to be used in conjunction with the course syllabus, the school library, the
Internet, the world of digital media, and any and all other available academic resources.
As such, this textbook is intended as an introduction to the history and philosophy of physical
education and sport, not as a definitive encyclopedic tome. It traces the essentials of the history
and philosophical underpinnings of kinesiology to provide a baseline understanding of the
discipline. However, it allows “breathing room” for faculty and students to engage in related
discussions and topics according to interest and expertise.
It is also intended to prepare students for further study, in special topics courses dedicated
to ethics, sociology, and current issues in sports, for example. It provides a framework for
understanding that encompasses a global view of history and philosophy to the extent possible
while striving for inclusivity in terms of diversity and appreciation for the scope of physical
activity worldwide. Much of the focus is still on the European and North American experience
of sport and physical education, as the textbook is intended toward those markets. Maintaining
an awareness of the fact that this is only one part of the world’s history, students are encouraged
to explore beyond their own cultures.
The book begins with a rationale for the study of the history and philosophy of physical
education and sport. The relevance of the need for this type of course in the kinesiology and
physical education curriculum is explained, and its bearing on students’ professional careers is
made clear.
Chapters 2 through 11 trace the history of physical education and sport from prehistoric
times to the early 21st century, with the inclusion of some dance history. Dance is part of a
comprehensive physical education, and dance studies have long been part of physical education
curricula. To ignore ritual, recreational, and artistic dance forms is to ignore an essential part
of the human physical experience, and this text examines a variety of ways in which dance has
been a part of our history.
Chapters 12 through 14 are dedicated to philosophical studies. In many ways, philosophical
ideas are woven throughout the book, as it is impossible to discuss the history of physical activity
without philosophical context. These chapters invite the reader to consider several branches
of philosophical study and the ways in which physical education and sport have been and are
viewed by philosophers. The interdisciplinary nature of the text opens up opportunities for team
teaching, as well.
In chapter 15, a more personal approach to history and philosophy is used to invite
students to see the history happening around them and to reflect upon their own philosophy.
Understanding their place in history is a critical conceptual leap, because many people think
only of the past when they think of history and do not see that history is happening around them
in their lifetimes. To begin to take stock of one’s own beliefs and philosophy is an empowering
step on the road to self-discovery, which is an overarching goal of the educational process.
The final chapter presents a selected variety of issues for study and discussion. For each issue,
references and basic information are provided, inviting further research or commentary. The
topics might also be useful for classroom discussions or debates, or might serve as topics for
research papers.
Each chapter includes a set of guiding questions, a list of key terms and concepts (mostly
those less likely to be familiar to readers), a summary, and a set of learning activities that may be
used at the discretion of the instructor. Unlike the other chapters, the activities in Chapters 13
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I would like to thank my colleague, Dr. Susan Rayl, for her inspiration and encouragement in the
writing of this book. My department chair, Dr. Phil Buckenmeyer, my dean, Dr. John Cottone,
and my colleagues in the Kinesiology Department at the State University of New York, College
at Cortland have been supportive, and I am grateful to all of them.
My research was made possible through the space provided by SUNY Cortland, and the
excellence of their holdings, online resources, and interlibrary loan officers. I would especially
like to thank Jeremy Pekarek, Archivist and Instructional Services Librarian, for access to the
SUNY Cortland College Archives (Memorial Library). Additional research was conducted at
Cornell University’s Olin and Uris Libraries.
My gratitude extends to the staff at Cognella Publishing, especially to Gem Rabanera, John
Remington, David Rajec, Alia Bales, and Susana Christie, without whom this textbook would
not have been written. Thank you for all your help and guidance through the process.
Finally, thanks to my husband, John Fracchia, for believing in this project and for helping and
supporting me every step of the way.
PREFACE 1
C H APTER 1
WHY STUDY HISTORY AND PHILOSOPHY IN PHYSICAL EDUCATION AND SPORT?
These questions, posed by Kirk (1992) for teaching about physical education curriculum,
clearly indicate the ongoing and forward-thinking nature of broad-based historical
understanding. Comprehension of our past helps us to understand why we do the things we
do in physical education and sport and helps us to think intelligently about where we might be
going in the future.
How do we discern facts from opinions, and how do we group facts to form theories? We can
describe experiences, using descriptive reasoning. Or we may start from a theory or hypothesis
and look for facts or research to support it, using deductive reasoning. Finally, we may collect
Most of your courses in your college major, whether it involves exercise science or physical
education, will focus on current knowledge, past and ongoing research, and experiential
activities. In addition to learning about exercise prescription, conditioning, exercise physiology,
and many more relevant topics, you will learn about broad concepts that are currently agreed
upon by members of the professional community. For example, current physical education
theory acknowledges three overall domains of skills acquired through physical education.
Educational theory currently holds that the psychomotor, cognitive, and affective goals of
education (sometimes known as Bloom’s Taxonomy) encompass the desired outcomes students
can hope or expect to achieve through physical education (Bloom, Englehart, Furst, Hill, &
Krathwohl, 1956; Anderson & Krathwohl, 2001).
• Psychomotor skills are motor skills that can be learned and practiced, such as dribbling a
soccer ball or serving a tennis ball.
• Cognitive skills are knowledge about physical activity, such as rules of games, theories in
coaching, or understanding the biomechanics of diving.
• Affective skills are comprised of subjective experiences such as the ability to rebound from a
slump using positive self-talk, feelings associated with sport participation and spectatorship,
and moral values such as a sense of fair play, good or bad sportsmanship, the ability to
cooperate with others, and team loyalty.
BO
• aerobic capacity,
• body composition,
• muscular strength,
• muscular endurance, and
Figure 1.2 An early logo of the YMCA, showing the • flexibility.
ideal balance between body, mind, and spirit.
SUMMARY
Below is a summary of main points from the chapter. Take a moment to review the Guiding
Questions. Then, read this summary to see how the content in the chapter responds to those
questions.
• Studying the history and philosophy of physical education and sport are essential to your
comprehensive scholarly preparation for a professional career in kinesiology, physical
education, or related professions.
• Historical study involves research into primary and secondary sources and assessment of
sources using a variety of methodologies.
• The main branches of philosophy studied in kinesiology are metaphysics, epistemology,
axiology, ethics, and aesthetics.
• Currently, physical education encompasses skills gained in the psychomotor, cognitive, and
affective domains.
• Fitness testing is widely practiced in the United States to help individuals understand the
importance of physical activity, and groups of professionals can work together to develop
measures based on experience and theoretical understanding.
• The US government works with nongovernmental agencies to collect historical and current
data and resources for research in physical activity, which is made available to the public at
HealthyPeople.gov.
• A professional needs a deep understanding of the historical and philosophical developments
that have led to today’s standards and practices of physical education and sport, and must
continue to learn about and share information in order to advance learning and public
awareness of the profession.
The following are suggestions for assignments and activities related to this chapter. Students
may do one or more to deepen their understanding of the history and philosophy of the time
period covered in this chapter, or develop similar group or individual projects using the text and
resources provided or other research.
2. Current Public Policy Initiatives in Physical Education and Health (Research): Visit the
website HealthyPeople.gov and click on the Healthy People in Action tab near the top of
the screen. On the next page, click on the State Plans on the left of the screen. Then
choose a state and research the public policy initiatives that are in the state’s plan. Do they
include plans to combat metabolic diseases such as diabetes? Are there plans to combat
obesity, suicide, and/or cardiovascular diseases? Find a link on the state plan page to
obtain information on progress toward achieving the initiatives, based on the most recent
research available. Create a PowerPoint presentation to explain the current state plan AND
the progress made so far in reaching the goals outlined in the state plan.
3. The Kraus-Weber (K-W) Minimum Test (Kinesthetic): During the 1940s and 1950s,
well before FitnessGram® was created, Dr. Hans Kraus and Dr. Sonja Weber developed a
physical fitness test that could be quickly and easily administered in schools to determine
fitness levels in children. The results of studies by Kraus and Prudden (Knuttgen, 1961)
indicated a failure rate of over 50% in American children. Carefully read a description of
each of the six parts of the test, including any precautionary advisories, at https://www.
topendsports.com/testing/kraus-weber.htm and work in groups to try it on volunteers from
the class. Can anyone pass? You will need a timekeeper and someone to record the results.
4. Meet the Librarian (Outreach): One of the greatest assets on campus is the library.
Sometimes certain librarians are designated as research specialists for different areas
of study, while other institutions may have more generalists on hand to help students.
Working with the library, arrange for a class meeting on-site at the library to learn about
finding the best online resources for academic research, discover what the library has to
offer in terms of periodicals and book collections and how to research using them. Find out
if there are historical archives at the library that might have information about your school’s
sports, physical education, and dance history. What kind of help can the library offer to
make student research papers go far, far beyond Wiki sources and online encyclopedia
research (also, how might those resources help students get started with research topics)?
REFERENCES
American Kinesiology Association. (2018). Section one: The AKA undergraduate core elements.
Retrieved from http://americankinesiology.org/SubPages/Pages/Undergraduate%20Core%20
Elements
Anderson, L. W., & Krathwohl, D. (Eds.). (2001). A taxonomy for learning, teaching, and assessing:
A revision of Bloom’s taxonomy of educational objectives. New York, NY: Longman.
Bloom, B., Englehart, M., Furst, E., Hill, W., & Krathwohl, D. (1956). Taxonomy of educational
objectives: The classification of educational goals. Handbook I: Cognitive domain. New York,
NY/Toronto, Canada: Longmans, Green.
Cooper Institute, The. (2014). Health-related Fitness Components. Retrieved from http://www.
cooperinstitute.org/fitnessgram/components
Ecker, D. W., & Kaelin, E. F. (1972). The limits of aesthetic inquiry: A guide to educational
research. In Philosophical redirection of educational research (L. G. Thomas, Ed.), pp. 258–286.
Seventy-First Yearbook of the National Society for the Study of Education, Part I. Chicago,
IL: National Society for the Study of Education.
Kirk, D. (1992). Curriculum history in physical education. In Research in physical education
and sport: Exploring alternative visions (A. C. Sparkes, Ed.). London, England: Falmer Press,
pp. 210–230.
Knuttgen, H. G. (1961). Comparison of fitness of Danish and American school children. Research
Quarterly, 32(2), 190–196.
Kretchmar, R. S. (2011). Philosophic research in physical activity. In Research methods in physical
activity (6th ed.) (J. R. Thomas, J. K. Nelson, & S. J. Silverman, Eds.). Champaign, IL: Human
Kinetics, pp. 235–251.
Office of Disease Prevention and Health Controls (2014, updated 2018). Healthy People 2020.
Retrieved from https://www.healthypeople.gov
Plowman, S. A., & Meredith, M. D. (2013). Fitnessgram/Activitygram Reference Guide (4th ed.).
Dallas, TX: The Cooper Institute: https://www.cooperinstitute.org/vault/2440/web/files/662.
pdf
Society of Health and Physical Educators (SHAPE America), Fitness Assessment Task Force.
(2017). Appropriate and inappropriate practices related to fitness testing. Retrieved from
https://www.shapeamerica.org/advocacy/positionstatements/pe/upload/Appropriate-and-
Inappropriate-Uses-of-Fitness-Testing-FINAL-3-6-17.pdf
Struna, N. L. (2011). Historical research in physical activity. In Research Methods in Physical
Activity (6th ed.) (J. R. Thomas, J. K. Nelson, & S. J. Silverman, Eds.). Champaign, IL: Human
Kinetics, pp. 217–233.
Thagard, P., & Shelley, C. (1997). Abductive reasoning: Logic, visual thinking, and coherence.
Retrieved from http://cogsci.uwaterloo.ca/Articles/Pages/Abductive.html
Winnick, J., & Short, F. (2014). The Brockport Physical Fitness Test Manual (2nd ed.). Retrieved
from https://www.pyfp.org/doc/brockport/brockport-ch1.pdf
Secondary source: historical resource not based on • Using reasoning and different forms of
first-person accounts, may include journal articles and
research, what could we surmise about
reference materials
prehistoric sport and physical education?
Deductive reasoning: starting from a major hypothesis and
examining phenomena to determine the validity of the • What do we know about the tools of
hypothesis
ancient hunters?
Inductive reasoning: observing individual instances that lead
to a generalization • How did physical activity change with
Logical (abductive) reasoning: examining different the transition to agrarian societies?
hypotheses and selecting the best logical choice to explain
phenomena • Did prehistoric physical activity have
Imitative magic: performing any ritual or dance in which expressive, spiritual, and ritualistic
activities (hunts, for example) are acted out with the
aspects?
desired outcome
Visualization: imagining a desired outcome (from a battle, for
example)
Bioarchaeology: the study of human remains in archaeology;
the study of ancient lifestyles
Osteoarchaeology: the study of human skeletal remains
Musculoskeletal stress marker (MSM): evidence of a bone’s
response to the stresses placed upon it by muscles
exerting repeated forces
Paleopathology: the study of ancient diseases
interpersonal cooperation was essential to survival. Here are some of the activities that we can
attribute to the dawn of sports:
• Running
• Jumping
• Climbing
• Swimming
• Throwing (spear, rock)
• Archery
• Diving
• Boating
• Wrestling/unarmed fighting
• Stick fighting
• Fishing
• Hunting
Agricultural societies developed as the Paleolithic Ice Age transitioned into the Holocene
Epoch, some 10,000 to 12,000 years ago (Bagley, 2013). The domestication of animals and the
cultivation of crops led to different physical challenges, including less movement, more carb-heavy
diets, and infections (Pinhasi & Stock, 2011; Cohen & Armelagos, 2004) possibly due, in part, to
unsanitary living conditions in close proximity to other humans and animals for long periods
of time. The study of health and disease in prehistoric cultures (paleopathology) and the study
• Riding horseback
• Archery from horseback
• Throwing from horseback
• Fighting bulls
• Throwing hammers
• Throwing trees
• Lifting, carrying, or dragging heavy objects
• Throwing sharp tools
• Kicking and throwing round objects such as fruits and vegetables
• Hitting round objects with sticks
SUMMARY
Below is a summary of main points from the chapter. Take a moment to review the Guiding Questions.
Then, read this summary to see how the content in the chapter responds to those questions.
• We can use a combination of inductive, deductive, and abductive reasoning to learn about
prehistoric sports and physical education.
• Other sources we can use to learn about prehistorical physical activity include bioarchaeology,
osteoarchaeology, paleopathology, archaeobotany, and prehistoric cave art.
• Using reasoning and different forms of research, we could surmise that prehistoric sport
derived from survival skills such as hunting and warfare, and the physical education of
youth was likely informally imitative of activities of elder members of a group rather than
formal in special facilities.
• Based on archaeological evidence, the tools of ancient hunters included rocks, spears, atlatls,
bows and arrows, and fighting sticks. Boats were used for transportation, in addition to
walking and running.
• Physical activity changed with the transition to agrarian societies because of the domestication
of horses and other animals and the need for different types of work to plant, harvest, and
process plants.
• Prehistoric physical activity—especially dance—had expressive, spiritual, and ritualistic aspects.
The following are suggestions for assignments and activities related to this chapter. Students
may do one or more to deepen their understanding of the history and philosophy of the time
period covered in this chapter, or develop similar group or individual projects using the text and
resources provided or other research.
1. The Lascaux Cave Paintings (Visual): In southwestern France, a cave was discovered in
1940 with artwork depicting animals and hunting. Visit http://archeologie.culture.fr/lascaux/
en and follow the guided tour to take a virtual trip through the cave. Notice the way the
artist(s) used the contours of the rock wall to enhance the paintings. What kinds of animals
are depicted? What kinds of hunting weapons were used? How might you classify this
form of archaeological evidence? Visit the rest of the website for interpretations of the
paintings and much more.
2. Ceremonial and Ritual Dance (Research): Some ancient societies have passed down
ritual dances to the present. Research online, or in the library with the help of a librarian,
to find a ritual dance that has been preserved and is still performed. What is the meaning
of the dance? What does it tell us about the culture from which it comes? Who is allowed
to perform it, and who is allowed to observe it? Why do you think it has survived to the
present day?
3. Prehistoric Video Survival Games (Experiential): If you like video games, try out Madruga
Works’ Dawn of Man, set in 12,000 BCE, Mountainwheel Games’ Stone Rage, set in the
Pleistocene Era, or other video games with prehistoric settings. Does playing these types
of games give you insight into the physical activities of prehistoric peoples? Do they help
you understand Carroll’s Symbolic Hunt Theory in any way?
FIGURE CREDITS
Fig. 2.1: Source: https://www.loc.gov/item/2005681022/.
Fig. 2.2: Source: https://digitalcollections.nypl.org/items/510d47da-dbee-a3d9-e040-e00a18064a99.
REFERENCES
Bagley, M. (2013, March 27). Holocene epoch: The age of man. Retrieved from https://www.
livescience.com/28219-holocene-epoch.html
Kalokagathia: ancient Greek ideal of physical beauty and • What qualities of body, mind, and spirit
psychological goodness
were expected of the ideal Greek citizen
Areteˉ: ancient Greek ideal of virtue, especially in actions
and/or athlete?
Agoˉn: gathering for a contest; also, the struggle
• Which cultures influenced the
Athlios: an athletic contest
competitive, ritual, and recreational
Herodikos: Greek physician, father of sports medicine, and
teacher of the physician Hippocrates games of ancient Greece and Rome?
Hoplites: Greek warriors • Which doctors of ancient Greece and
Agoge: school of physical education in Sparta Rome had the most influences on
Pankration/pancratium: highly prestigious mixed–martial art Western civilization’s views of health
combination of wrestling and boxing
fitness?
Paidonomos: in Sparta, the overseer and disciplinarian of an
agoge • How was physical education different
Palaestra: in Athens and later in Rome, a school of physical between ancient Sparta and Athens, and
education including wrestling and other sports
between ancient Greece and ancient
Paidotribe: owner of a palaestra; one of the first types of
physical educators Rome?
Gymnasia: plural of gymnasium, a gathering place for men to • Why were the Olympics and other
exercise, read, and hold discussions
ancient Greek and Roman games
Olympics: one of the Panhellenic sporting events held every
four years, at which men and boys from all over Greece important to sports history?
could compete for honors
• fishing,
• hunting (lions, wild goats, deer, and wild boar) using a variety of weapons and snares,
• swimming,
• boxing,
• wrestling,
• archery,
• tumbling, and
• running.
They were also apparently fond of acrobatic displays, including bull-vaulting or bull-leaping,
in which they used the back, nose, and horns of bulls or oxen to perform daring stunts. Dances
and ritual dances were part of their lives, and they enjoyed juggling, pastimes such as dice or
knucklebone games, and board games (Howell & Palmer, 1969).
Figure 3.1 Bull-leaping fresco from the Great Palace at Knossos, Crete (Heraklion
Archaeological Museum), circa 17th–15th century BCE.
SPARTA
ATHENS
In the 6th century and the first part of the 5th century BCE, physical culture and fitness played an
important part of life for noble Athenian males. The slaves and poor had limited access to formal
physical education, but manual labor and farming provided exercise for them. The wealthier
families enjoyed leisure time and a fondness for arts and beauty in this cradle of democracy.
Females did not receive public gymnastic training or formal schooling in Athens, but some
women were trained in dance ritual and performance, which will be discussed further in
this chapter. Pottery and ancient Greek literature indicate that males participated in various
sports and games. Sports included acrobatics, running (sprints and distance, the hoplite race,
and torch races), swimming, the pentathlon, jumping, discus, javelin, pankration, swinging,
seesaw, hunting, riding, fishing, dancing, and episkyros, a ball game with some similarities to
American football. Games such as rolling hoops, board games, mora (a hand guessing game),
ephidrismos (in which the object was for a blindfolded person to guess who hit him), and
ostrakinda (a dice game in which losers had to carry partners piggyback) were all popular
pastimes (Zeigler, 1988).
From approximately ages 6 to 18, upper-class males attended a music school to learn language
arts, mathematics, and music (Forbes, 1929). For their physical education, during those years
they first went to a wrestling school, at which gymnastics and other athletics like swimming
and various field sports and games were taught and practiced. This type of open-air school was
known as a palaestra, where boys were taught by a paidotribe (meaning “boy-rubber,” so called
because of the practice of covering the body with olive oil and dust or sand before exercise).
The word palaestra might refer to the name of a mythical daughter of the god Hermes, and
both of them presided over this type of school as deities of special importance to wrestlers.
Paidotribes usually owned their schools and thus were among the first entrepreneurial physical
fitness instructors known to Western civilization.
If a boy were wealthy enough, he would also study riding at a separate school under
polodamnes (riding instructors) (Forbes, 1929). Other specialist instructor categories included
the javelin teacher (akontistikos), the hoplomachos, who taught military dances and drills in
armor, and finally (more rarely seen in Athens), the toxotes, who taught archery (Forbes,
1929). Activities at the palaestra were performed in the nude to motivate development of
physical beauty, with exercises attuned to different ages. They were often accompanied by flute
music (Bucher, 1956).
To continue their physical education, after about age 14 to 16, boys went to gymnasia, where
more varieties of recreational physical training were offered. Hunting and chariot racing were
available. From ages 18–20, young men could attend ephebia, originally military training and
gymnastic academies. As time went on, literature and philosophy were added to the curriculum,
which tended to weaken the military emphasis considerably. Similarly, in early Athens, only
children who were born to parents who were both citizens were allowed to attend ephebia. Later,
foreigners were allowed to enroll (Forbes, 1929).
Alternatively, in Athens and throughout the Greek world, young men could join one of the
neoi, an association for 19 to 20 year olds. This type of group was not part of the educational
system. In it, youth became part of political associations, with some exercise and recreational
activities. One of their favorite sports was the diadrome, a sort of team-race (Willetts, 1981).
Gymnasia were open to men to continue their fitness training throughout their lifetimes.
The owner of a gymnasium (gymnasiarch) presided over an institution dedicated to a particular
deity. Major cities had more than one gymnasium. In Athens, for example, the Academy was
dedicated to Athena, the Lyceum honored Apollo, and the Kynosarges paid homage to Heracles
(Bucher, 1956). During the late Athenian period, from the victory over the Persians in 480 BCE
to the defeat at the hands of the Macedonians in 338 BCE, mercenaries replaced citizen-soldiers
and the appeal of gymnasiums was for the intellectual gatherings, rather than for the physical
training. The life of the mind and the pleasures of the flesh led to a shift in priorities of education,
though Lämmer (1992) argues that most military leaders, outstanding soldiers, and political
leaders still came from strong physical education backgrounds.
To accommodate fans, dignitaries, and other athletes, an oblong stadium capable of holding
over 40,000 spectators was built, with posts at each end to mark running distances. For example, a
stade was a footrace of about 200 yards, from one end of the stadium to the other, and the diaulos
and hoplite (dressed in 50 pounds of armor) races were approximately 400 yards (Zeigler, 1988).
The dolichos race could be three-quarters of a mile to two and a quarter miles (Forbes, 1929).
Over the years, different types of events were added to the games, including competitions
in music and other arts. While most events featured individual athletes, evidence suggests that
there were also events such as horse races, chariot races, and a version of field hockey (Bucher,
1956; Spears, 1977; Zeigler, 1988). Boxing, introduced in 688 BCE, was an event on its own
as well as a component of the
pankration.
Another combination event
was the pentathlon, which in
ancient Greece consisted of
running a stade, long jumping
using weights held in each hand
(halteres), javelin, discus, and
pankration. Opinions on the
importance of the pentathlon
with respect to other events vary,
with one author (Lämmer, 1992)
arguing that literary evidence show
that the pentathlon was no more
important than any other event,
and that versatility in athleticism
Figure 3.5 Ancient Greek halteres, held in hands and used to increase long held no particular appeal for the
jump distance (National Archaeological Museum, Athens). Greeks.
• Paians to Apollo, god of healing, which were rituals against sickness and death,
• Hyporchémata, also for Apollo, which were dramatic dances of mythological topics,
• Emméleia: round solemn dances done by women in celebration of the gods, and
• Gymnopaidiai festival dances such as the korybante, performed by nude singing boys in
teams, with combative or wrestling overtones (Sachs, 1937).
Finally, the military (armored) dances were mainly performed by boys, though the pyrrhichē
(Pyrrhic) was sometimes performed by girls (especially in Sparta). The pyrrhichē dance was
taught by state teachers, primarily for military training purposes. Typical movements of this type
of dance could include running, leaping, stepping backwards, whirling, crouching, and all sorts
of arm movements with lances, shields, and swords. A chalmys (cloak) was sometimes draped on
the left arm and used as a sort of shield.
Another armored dance was known as the dance of the Clashers. In it, dancers clashed
helmets, swords, and shields to relate the efforts of Rhea, Zeus’s mother, to save her infant son
from her husband, Kronos. The noise of the dance was meant to cover the sound of Zeus’s cries
(Emmanuel, 1916; Sachs, 1937).
Dance was a means of bringing together communities in folk dances, a way of honoring the
gods, a form of entertainment with possible moral, mythological, tragic, or comic overtones,
and a supplement to military exercises. It may also have served therapeutic and fitness goals
implicitly to the extent that dance and other forms of physical education are related.
Thermae also had shops and services such as that of the hair plucker, who plucked the armpits
of patrons, and various food and beverage vendors. Given the importance of oratory to Roman
public life, it is not surprising that Quintilian designed and taught exercises specifically to
improve the public speaking gestures of the aristocracy as one of those services. Drinking and
socializing were also part of the experience, sometimes replacing exercise altogether (McIntosh,
1981). Thermae were not the only fitness facilities in Rome. The Campus Martius, for example,
was located on the outskirts of Rome and served as a recreational sports facility (Bucher, 1956).
Galen, a prominent and influential physician, was born in 130 CE in Pergamos, Greece, but
achieved fame for his work in the Roman Empire. He worked as a medical officer in a school of
gladiators, and later in 170 CE was court physician to Marcus Aurelius’s son, Commodus. He died
in 200 or 201 CE. He wrote about the difference between normal fitness for health (beneficial)
and athletic fitness (potentially dangerous) and wrote Hygiene (aka De Sanitate Tuenda) as well
as other works dealing with health and wellness.
Galen generally classified types of exercises into three categories.
1. Vigorous: for strengthening without violent movement. Resistance training, rope climbing,
digging, isometric exercises (such as holding halteres in each hand steady in front or above
the body), and other muscular tension–inducing exercises
2. Training for quickness or speed: running, sparring, punching bag, rolling, etc.
3. Violent: doing the exercises from groups 1 and 2 (above) in a different way; for example,
wearing armor or carrying weights (McIntosh, 1981, pp. 56–57)
He believed that different age groups (7 and younger, 7 to 14, and 14 to 21) should perform
different exercises or modifications of exercises for health. Recommending massage before and
after exercise and advising warmups before exercise for injury prevention, he also addressed the
affective domain of physical education with his conviction that the best exercise “is that which
produces health of body, harmony of its parts, and mental excellence” (McIntosh, 1981, p. 60).
He was also known for his development of the Hippocratic idea of balancing bodily humors
(phlegm, blood, black bile, and yellow bile) to achieve
natural health (Boylan, M. n.d. a).
In his Exercises With the Small Ball, Galen presented an
inexpensive, accessible, and enjoyable means of training
body, eye, and mental faculties, while exercising all parts
of the body and improving morality. He saw the small ball
exercises as adaptable to all ages and physical conditions
and able to give delight to the spirit (McIntosh, 1981, p. 60).
In this work, he presents a system of exercise that meets
the needs of healthful exercise without undue expense and
without excluding anyone (male, female, young, old, or
infirm) who wished to pursue fitness without excess.
Figure 3.9 The Colosseum, also known as the Flavian Amphitheater, built between 72 and 80 CE.
SUMMARY
Below is a summary of main points from the chapter. Take a moment to review the Guiding
Questions. Then, read this summary to see how the content in the chapter responds to those
questions.
• Primary and secondary historical sources are used for research into ancient Greek and
Roman culture, ideals, physical education, festivals, and dances.
• The ideal Greek citizen and/or athlete was expected to demonstrate kalokagathia, or beauty
of body and mind, as well as aretē, or virtue (especially moral virtue in action).
• The Minoan and Etruscan cultures influenced the competitive, ritual, and recreational
games of ancient Greece and Rome.
• Doctors of ancient Greece and Rome such as Herodikos, Hippocrates, and Galen had the
most influences on Western civilization’s views of health fitness.
• Physical education systems in ancient Sparta and Rome were more militaristic than was the
physical education system of Athens. Different attitudes toward the role of physical training
and athletic training in the lives of citizens yielded different emphases on teaching methods
and practice among the city-states of ancient Greece and between Greece and Rome.
• The Olympics and other ancient Greek and Roman games were important to sports history
because of their religious significance, the written records of competitive sports and training,
their sociopolitical importance to the populace and to the leaders, and to the relationships
between athletes and spectators.
• Theatrical, ritual, and military types of dance were performed in ancient Greece and Rome.
• The Colosseum and the Circus Maximus were essential to ancient Roman culture
in providing central locations for free athletic events aimed at keeping the populace
contented.
The following are suggestions for assignments and activities related to this chapter. Students
may do one or more to deepen their understanding of the history and philosophy of the time
period covered in this chapter, or develop similar group or individual projects using the text and
resources provided or other research.
1. Greek Visual Arts (Visual): Find images of Greek athletic activities, dances, and games
depicted on ancient vases, bowls, and paintings. Create a display of these, identifying the
activities and any special characteristics of the images.
3. Philosophy, Physical Education, and Sports (Research): Research the writings of Plato
and Aristotle concerning physical education, and create a T-chart showing the differences
between their philosophies in terms of recommended activities, ages for different training,
benefits and risks of physical activity, and the place of physical education and sport in society.
4. Virtual Tours (Outreach): Search the Internet to find video tours of archaeological sites
such as Olympia, ancient Greek theaters where dances were performed, the Colosseum,
the Circus Maximus, thermae (baths) such as that of the Emperor Caracalla (Rome), etc.,
to get a better idea of the spaces used for physical education and sport in ancient Greece
and Rome.
5. Types of Gladiators (Research): Research the following types of gladiators to see what
types of weapons they used, what they wore, and what other types of gladiators they were
likely to fight.
Secutores
Thraces
Myrmillones
Retiarii
Hoplomachi
Provocatores
Dimachaeri
Essedarii
Andabatae
Meridiani
Bestiarii
Fiscales
Caesariani/Postulati
Catevarii
Samnites
REFERENCES
Avramidou, A. (2009). The Phersu game revisited. Etruscan Studies 12(1), 73–86.
Boylan, M. (n.d. a). Galen. In Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Retrieved from https://www.
iep.utm.edu/galen/
Boylan, M. (n.d. b). Hippocrates. In Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Retrieved from https://
www.iep.utm.edu/hippocra/#SH2a
Bucher, C. A. (1956). Foundations of physical education (2nd ed.). St. Louis, MO: C. V. Mosby.
Carcopino, J. (1941). Daily life in ancient Rome: The people and the city at the height of the Empire.
London, England: George Routledge & Sons. Retrieved from https://archive.org/details/
dailylifeinancie035465mbp
Cicero, M. T. (63 BCE/1929). Pro Murena (C. D. Yonge & E. S. Crooke, Trans.). Sydney, Australia:
George B. Philip & Son.
Drees, L. (1964). Olympia: Gods, artists, and athletes. London, England: Hutchinson.
Edgar, A. (2013). The birth of sport. Sport, Ethics and Philosophy, 7(1), 55–79. doi:
10.1080/17511321.2013.761883
Emmanuel, M. (1916). The antique Greek dance (H. J. Beavley, Trans.). New York, NY: Dodd,
Mead.
Forbes, C. A. (1929). Greek physical education. New York, NY: Century.
Hawhee, D. (2004). Bodily arts: Rhetoric and athletics in ancient Greece. Austin, TX: University
of Texas Press.
Homer. (800 BCE/1975). The Iliad (R. Fitzgerald, Trans.). New York, NY: Anchor Press/
Doubleday.
As a consequence of a traditional academic bias toward Western culture in the study of history and
philosophy, physical education scholars from Western countries have tended to author texts that
focus on the history and philosophy of ancient Greece and Rome, Europe, and the United States.
There is nothing inherently wrong with that approach: however, it is limited and insufficient to
a complete understanding of history and philosophy. By confining our understanding to one
strain of cultural history, we mostly ignore the heritage of many of the students in kinesiology
and physical education programs while depriving ourselves of the opportunity to gain an
appreciation for the contributions of non-Western countries to sport and physical education.
Furthermore, by maintaining focus on Western contributions, an assumption of superiority
may be unintentionally conveyed to students. Opinions may be formed like this one: if we do
not study the sports of non-Western societies, it must be because they are less important, less
developed, and less popular than the sports of Western cultures. They do not appear on our
televisions, we will probably never play them, we don’t have to teach them in our curriculum,
and they do not make money from broadcast rights and merchandise sales in our country;
therefore, they are irrelevant. All of that may be true, except the irrelevant part.
It would be impossible to study every culture, philosophy, and sport in the world in the
context of a semester’s course. That is no excuse for ignoring the contributions of other countries,
however. There is much we could learn if we broaden our perspective. Later in this textbook, we
will consider global sport in the context of recent centuries and international sports competitions.
This chapter covers some limited, but illustrative, examples of ancient non-Western societies’
athletic heritage.
Figure 4.1. It takes effort and will to broaden perspectives, but the journey is worth it.
According to legend, the Mesoamerican ball game honored the memory of a ball game
played by the Mayan gods Hun Hunahpú and Vucub Hunahpú. In another tradition, the Aztec
rulers Motecuhzoma Xocoyotzin and the ruler of Texcoco were the first to play the game, for
the conquest of territory. In either case, warriors were always important participants. The
The ancient Japanese hunted and fished for sustenance. In the second century BCE, Japanese
society was becoming more agrarian. The religious festivals held at their shrines included archery
contests, early sumo wrestling, and ritual dances to ensure a good harvest. Weather prediction
was sometimes based on the outcome of horse races. The relationships between earth, people,
livestock, game, and crops were played out in sport by people at all levels of Japanese society
(Sasajima, 1969, 1988).
Figure 4.3 Sumo wrestling bout. A gyoji, or referee, carries a wooden war-fan, while a shimpan
(umpire) watches on the right. Mid-19th-century woodcut.
The ancient Chinese kicking game of tsu-chu is first mentioned in writings of the third century
BCE, but it may, in fact, be much older than that. Players used their feet to kick a ball over a net,
into a hole in the ground, or through a hole. Remnants of the game survive today throughout Asia
and southeast Asia as sepak takraw, or sepak raga, and as kemari in Japan. Its many variations
have been used for military training and for recreation over the years (Simri, 1973).
The Chinese philosopher and teacher Confucius (551–479 BCE) recommended that upper-
class males study archery, charioteering, and music (which also meant dance) as part of their
development of diplomatic skills. They were not expected to serve in the military, so they did
not train in the martial arts (Brownell, 2017). On the other hand, ancient Taoist principles of
Chinese philosophy found in the book, the Chuang-tzŭ, also recommend that people seek “the
fast of the mind” (hsin chai) and “sitting in forgetfulness” (tso wang), or meditative practices for
health and well-being (Feng, 1952, p. 241). In general, a sense of balance and equilibrium was
considered essential to the simplicity of being for many followers of the Tao.
Confucius’s contemporary, general and author of The Art of War Sun Tzu (544–496 BCE),
remarks on only one form of exercise for warriors: squatting. For those who studied the martial
arts in the Warring States Period (450–221 BCE), wrestling and tsu-chu were part of their physical
training regimen. There is some evidence that Greek physical education habits and sports skills
were brought to China via trade routes through Macedonia, where gymnasia were to be found
thanks to the spread of Greek culture by Alexander the Great (356–323 BCE) (Christopoulos,
2010; Finn, 1988). Alexander was a friend of the Olympic champion of the pancratium
(combination of wrestling and boxing) (336 BCE), Dioxippus. The armies of Alexander, under
his influence, took tents with them on their military expeditions and practiced the pancratium
and in 326 BCE carried the sport with them across the Himalayas, where it may have become a
Ancient Egyptians were fond of games, acrobatics, juggling, and dance. In some cases, gymnastics
and acrobatics were performed by female dancers as part of cult celebrations (Trigger, 1993). For
those who did not have to spend their lives building its architectural marvels, according to some
authors, leisure time allowed for fishing, field hockey, running, swimming, boxing, gymnastics,
jumping, walking, archery, javelin throwing, wrestling, and boating (Decker, 1992; Mark, 2017).
People of all non-slave social classes participated in games and sports, and physical fitness was
highly prized in ancient Egyptian society.
Figure 4.6 An Egyptian dancer/acrobat, from a painting on pottery, circa 1292–1186 BCE.
SUMMARY
Below is a summary of main points from the chapter. Take a moment to review the Guiding
Questions. Then, read this summary to see how the content in the chapter responds to those
questions.
• Non-Western refers to countries of the world which do not include Europe, North America,
Australia, and other countries sharing a similar world economy as well as societal values and
other cultural similarities.
• We study non-Western history in physical education and sport in order to understand other
cultures to broaden our understanding and appreciation of their contributions to the world
of sport and physical education.
• While more research is needed to expand our understanding of sport and physical education
in ancient cultures, there is much we can learn about sports in ancient world civilizations
in Mesoamerica, Japan, China, India, and Egypt that can serve as a starting point for
understanding ancient non-Western sport.
• We can learn about sports in the ancient world through ancient texts, artworks, legends,
architecture, decorative arts, and modern-day vestiges of ancient sports.
• Societal influences such as religion, class structures, traditions, women’s roles, and
socioeconomic differences can be seen to have impacted ancient non-Western physical
education and sport.
The following are suggestions for assignments and activities related to this chapter. Students
may do one or more to deepen their understanding of the history and philosophy of the time
period covered in this chapter, or develop similar group or individual projects using the text and
resources provided or other research.
2. Sports and Games in Non-Western Cultures (Research): Select a sport or game such
as bo-taoshi, sepak takraw, sumo wrestling, fireball soccer, or buzkashi. Write a research
paper of approximately three to five pages about the pastime. Where is it played, and by
whom? What are the basic rules? What is its history? What is its place in the culture? This
would be an excellent opportunity to work with your librarian to find resources.
3. The Experience of Yoga (Kinesthetic): There are many ways to experience yoga. The best
is to take a class, if there is a qualified teacher nearby. If not, you might try following
along with a beginner video online, or even consulting a book that can guide you through
some basic asanas. Be aware of recommendations about correct form, the use of breath,
and focus. What benefits do you think you would derive if you were able to practice yoga
long term? If you have experienced yoga before, try a different type of yoga for a new
experience.
FIGURE CREDITS
Fig. 4.1: Source: https://pixabay.com/photos/isolate-top-mountains-alone-cliff-1209275/.
Fig. 4.2: Copyright © 2006 by Sputnik, (CC BY-SA 2.5) at https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/
index.php?curid=785963.
Fig. 4.3: Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Kunisada_Sumo_Triptychon_c1860s.jpg.
Fig. 4.4: Copyright © 2009 by Kevin Poh, (CC BY 2.0) at https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/
File:Art_of_Shaolin_Kung_Fu.jpg.
REFERENCES
Alchin, L. (2018). Ancient Egyptian sports. Retrieved from http://www.historyembalmed.org/
ancient-egyptians/ancient-egyptian-sports.htm
Anand, V. (2008). The Indian defense [Web log post]. Retrieved from http://content.time.com/
time/specials/2007/article/0,28804,1815747_1815707_1815674,00.html
Brewster, P. G. (1960). The Egyptian game khazza lawizza and its Burmese counterpart. Zeitschrift
für Ethnologie 85(2), 211–213.
Brownell, S. (2017). Sport in China. In R. Edelman & W. Wilson (Eds.), The Oxford handbook of
sports, 241–256.
Cartwright, M. (2013, September 16). The ball game of Mesoamerica. Ancient History Encyclopedia.
Retrieved from https://www.ancient.eu/article/604/the-ball-game-of-mesoamerica/
Christopoulos, L. (2010). Early combat sport rituals in China and the rise of professionalism
(475 BC to 220 AD). Nikephoros, 23, 19–41.
Corcoran, J., & Farkas, E. (1983). Martial arts: Traditions, history, people. New York, NY: Gallery
Books.
Decker, W. (1992). Sports and games of ancient Egypt (A. Guttmann, Trans.). New Haven, CT:
Yale University Press.
Feng, Y-L. (1952). A history of Chinese philosophy, Vol. I: The period of the philosophers (2nd ed.).
(D. Bodde, Trans.) Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
Finn, M. (1988). Martial arts: A complete illustrated history. Woodstock, NY: Overlook Press.
Glassford, R. G. (1969). The Mesoamerican rubber ball games. In Proceedings of the First
International Seminar on the History of Physical Education and Sport (April 9–11, 1968). (Uriel
Simri, Ed.) Netanya, Israel: Wingate Institute for Physical Education, pp. 22-1–22-13.
Hays, J. (2009). Games in Japan: Go, shogi, kemari, and children’s games. Retrieved from http://
factsanddetails.com/japan/cat21/sub144/item791.html
Hemisphere. (2018). National Geographic Society. Retrieved from https://www.
nationalgeographic.org/encyclopedia/hemisphere/
Henderson, R. W. (1947). Ball, bat and bishop: The origin of ball games. New York, NY: Rockport
Press.
Krickeberg, W. (1966). El juego de pelota mesoamericano y su simbolismo religiose. In P.
Kirchhoff (Ed.), Traducciones mesoamericanistas (pp. 191–313). México: Sociedad Mexicana
de Antropología.
Kyle, D. G. (1993, May). Decker on sport in pharaonic Egypt: Recreations and rituals, combats
and ceremonies, agonism—and athletics? Sports and games of ancient Egypt [Review of the
book Sports and games of ancient Egypt by W. Decker (A. Guttmann, Trans.)]. Canadian
Journal of History of Sport, 24(1), 75–83.
Mark, J. J. (2017). Games, sports & recreation in ancient Egypt. Retrieved from https://www.
ancient.eu/article/1036/games-sports--recreation-in-ancient-egypt/
McInerney, J. (2011). Bulls and bull-leaping in the Minoan world. Expedition, (3), 6–13.
Joust: Medieval sport of one-on-one riding in armor toward an • Where was the technique of classical
opponent and using a lance to unseat him
ballet developed?
Knights-errant: knights who roamed the country to
participate in tournaments (melees) to make their fortunes • How did the Enlightenment philosophers
Lists: name for a jousting arena affect the way educators thought about
Quintain: target for jousting practice; examples might be a the mind and body?
simple shield, or a rotating man-shaped target
Figure 5.2 A hunting party leaving the castle. From a tapestry circa 1495–1515, the
Netherlands.
Figure 5.3 From the Allegory of Good Government by Ambrogio Lorenzetti, a fresco at the Palazzo Pubblico in Siena,
Italy, mid-14th century. This detail shows dancing as one of the benefits of good government.
Figure 5.5 Replica of a Dance of Death fresco. The original fresco is in the Church of the Holy Trinity, Hrastovlje, Slovenia.
English physical education for younger students during this period often lacked formality
in private homes. However, at Merchant Taylors, an upper-class institution founded in 1347,
Headmaster Richard Mulcaster (who administered the school from 1560–1586) wrote books on
education that included supervised physical education beyond informal games. Influenced by
Castiglione as well as a militaristic attitude, he believed that athletics should develop motor skills
and physical exercises should help with health fitness or
rehabilitation after illness (McIntosh, 1981; Semenza,
2003).
THE ENLIGHTENMENT
The Age of Enlightenment, sometimes
called the Age of Reason, refers to the late
17th through the 18th centuries, an era of
profound liberal humanistic philosophical
thought. During the Enlightenment, men
such as Descartes and Kant pondered the
nature of being, mind/body duality, and
morality. Descartes’ famous insight, “I
think, therefore I am,” in Discourse on the
Method of Rightly Conducting One’s Reason
and of Seeking Truth in the Sciences (1637)
appeared on the early end of this period.
Kant’s works, published in the late 1700s,
light the latter side. We will revisit Kant in
a later chapter because his work on ethics is
also part of our studies.
A recurring theme throughout this text
has been the foundational educational
notion that bodily health and fitness are
important to intellectual health and well-
being. In Western thought, we have seen it
since the Greek ideal of aretē, and the
Roman author Juvenal (60 CE–130 CE)
reiterated it in his Satires as “mens sana in
corpore sano,” (X, 356), which means “a
sound mind in a sound body.” That refrain Figure 5.10 An example of Feuillet dance notation, from John
was taken up by English philosopher Weaver’s book, Orchesography, 2nd edition, 1721.
Figure 5.11 Jean-Jacques Rousseau, author of Émile, or Treatise on Education. Notice the natural
setting and the book he carries, representing learning from both.
SUMMARY
Below is a summary of main points from the chapter. Take a moment to review the Guiding
Questions. Then, read this summary to see how the content in the chapter responds to those
questions.
• When political control of the Roman Empire shifted to Constantinople, chariot races and
a form of polo known as tyzkanion became popular. Women were not allowed to attend
chariot races, and the gory gladiatorial events of Rome were less welcome in Byzantium.
• Commoners, clergy, and nobility each had different types of sports and recreational
pastimes during the Middle Ages, Renaissance, and Reformation, sometimes by choice and
sometimes by decree.
• Knighthood was a status achieved through military training and valor in medieval times,
and chivalry was the code by which an ideal knight lived.
• Overall, sports and games were tolerated and often encouraged by clerics from the Middle
Ages through the Counter-Reformation so long as they were practiced in moderation and
did not interfere with religious obligations.
• The technique of classical ballet was developed in France, and ballet dancers still use French
vocabulary throughout the world to describe its movements.
• The Enlightenment philosophers gave deep consideration to the relationship between the
mind and the body, generally encouraging health fitness for the sake of mental fitness.
The following are suggestions for assignments and activities related to this chapter. Students
may do one or more to deepen their understanding of the history and philosophy of the time
period covered in this chapter, or develop similar group or individual projects using the text and
resources provided or further research.
1. The Education of Nobility (Research): Search online or in your library for Vergerio’s
De Ingenuis Moribus et Liberalibus Studiis (On the Manners of a Gentleman and Liberal
Studies) (1402–1403), Castiglione’s Il Cortegiano (The Courtier) (1528), and James VI’s
Basilikon Doron (Royal Gift) (1599). According to these sources, did the expectations of
participation in sport and recreational games change over the course of the 15th and 16th
centuries? If so, how?
2. Spectacle and Performance (Visual): Clothing styles affected posture, carriage, everyday
movement, and dance. For early court dances and ballets, costumes could be even more
restrictive. Use websites such as http://world4.eu/history-of-costumes/, http://www.vam.
ac.uk/content/articles/o/origins-of-ballet/, and https://www.fashion-era.com/undergarments.
htm to download images of dancers and nobles, noting how undergarments, clothing weight,
and fashions might have affected movement for dance and recreational pastimes.
3. Timeline (Conceptual Understanding): Create a timeline showing the period from the fall
of the Roman Empire (476 CE) through the Enlightenment (early 1800s). Note the major
social, political, religious, and educational events and indicate which sports and games
were popular for men and women in each era.
4. Jousting Training (Kinesthetic): Using Strutt’s The Sports and Pastimes of the People
of England or a similar historical source, find out how different quintains were used and
develop safe modern-day versions. For example, use pool noodles and bicycles, kayaks,
piggyback carries, wheelchairs, or scooters to tilt at targets. Video-record your efforts to
share with other students. Period costumes are optional.
FIGURE CREDITS
Fig. 5.1: Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Cistercian_monks_at_work.jpg.
Fig. 5.2: Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:A_Hunting_Party_Leaving_a_Castle_
(From_Incidents_in_a_Stag_Hunt)_MET_152384_1.jpg.
Fig. 5.3: Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Lorenzetti_Good_Govt_Detail.jpg.
Fig. 5.4: Copyright © by Supersabre. Reprinted with permission.
Fig. 5.5: Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Dance_of_Death_(replica_of_15th_
century_fresco;_National_Gallery_of_Slovenia).jpg.
REFERENCES
Androne, M. (2014a). The influence of the Protestant Reformation on education. Procedia—
Social and Behavioral Sciences, 137(1), 80–87.
Androne, M. (2014b). Notes on John Locke’s views on education. Procedia—Social and Behavioral
Sciences 137(1), 74–79.
Anglo, S. (1988). How to win at tournaments: The technique of chivalric combat. Antiquaries
Journal, 68(2), 248–264.
Arbeau, T. (1589/1967). Orchesography. New York, NY: Dover.
Ballou, R. B. (2006). An analysis of the writings of selected Church fathers to A.D. 394 to reveal
attitudes regarding physical activity. In E. F. Ziegler (Ed.), Sport and physical education in the
Middle Ages (pp. 26–39). Victoria, British Columbia, Canada: Trafford.
Beeler, J. (1971). Warfare in feudal Europe, 730–1200. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.
Blount, T. (1679). Fragmenta antiquitatis: Ancient tenures of land. London, England: Butterworth
and Son.
Broekhoff, J. (2006). Chivalric education in the middle ages. In E. F. Ziegler (Ed.), Sport and
physical education in the Middle Ages (pp. 40–48). Victoria, British Columbia, Canada:
Trafford.
Cameron, A. (1976). Circus factions: Blues and greens at Rome and Byzantium. London, England:
Oxford University Press.
Carter, J. M. (1988). Sports and pastimes of the middle ages. Lanham, MD: University Press of
America.
Carter, J. M. (1992). Medieval games: Sports and recreations in feudal society. New York, NY:
Greenwood Press.
Carter, J. M. (2006) Sport in the Bayeux Tapestry. In E. F. Ziegler (Ed.), Sport and physical
education in the Middle Ages (pp. 49–55). Victoria, British Columbia, Canada: Trafford.
Casalini, C. (2014). Active leisure: The body in sixteenth-century Jesuit culture. Journal of Jesuit
Studies, 1(3). Retrieved from https://doi.org/10.1163/22141332-00103003
Castiglione, B. (1528/2003). The book of the courtier. Mineola, NY: Dover.
Cho, D. (2016). Huldrych Zwingli: A Christian humanistic educator. Liberty University Press.
Retrieved from https://www.academia.edu/37200416/_Huldrych_Zwingli_A_Christian_
Humanistic_Educator_in_Legacy_of_Religious_Educators-_Historical_and_Theological_
Introductions.pdf
Ebreo, G. (1463/1993). De pratica seu arte tripudii (On the practice or art of dancing) B. Sparti
(Ed.). New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
Elyot, T. (1531). The book of the governor. Retrieved from https://archive.org/stream/
bokenamedgouerno01elyouoft/bokenamedgouerno01elyouoft_djvu.txt
Minuet: a stately dance of the 18th century, exemplifying the dance in colonial America?
grace, symmetry, and elegance of the time
Contra dance: longways dances, in which groups of two or
three couples dance repeated figures before progressing
up and down the lines to dance with other groups of
couples
Folk dance: participatory dances from different nations, using
the music and clothing of the country from which they
originate
Can you name a sport or recreational pastime that was traditionally played by indigenous peoples
in North America? Aside from footraces, swimming, horseback riding, archery, hunting, fishing,
canoeing, and climbing, many people nowadays would name the game we now know as lacrosse.
Versions of that game were known in southern parts of American colonies as toli or kabucha
(Choctaw), anetsó (Cherokee), hótti icósi (Creek), and sometimes as bagataway or the Creator’s
Game among Great Lakes and mid-Atlantic groups such as the Huron, Algonquin, Mohawk,
Onondaga, Ojibwe, and other Six Nation Iroquois tribes to help keep peace among them (Haag
& Millis, 2001; Rasmussen, 2018). The Haudenosaunee know it as their medicine game, and to
this day they play it with deep spiritual intent to help heal the sick (Jacques, 2018, personal
communication).
Figure 6.2 In this painting, Militia Training (James G. Clonney, 1841), the general mood of merriment and carousing is evident
with depictions of dancing, drinking, and a shooting competitor.
SUMMARY
Below is a summary of main points from the chapter. Take a moment to review the Guiding
Questions. Then, read this summary to see how the content in the chapter responds to those
questions.
• Among the sports we know were played by indigenous peoples in North America are
versions of lacrosse, double-ball, shinny, and footraces.
• Sports and recreational gambling were common among indigenous peoples and colonists.
• Different sports and pastimes played in different regions of colonial America, depending on
socioeconomic status, ethnicity, religion, climate, topography, and immigration patterns.
• Puritan and Quaker beliefs affected participation in physical activities, often restricting
them with legislation concerning Sabbath-day activities; those restrictions were relaxed over
time and did not forbid all physical exercises and pastimes.
• Of the Founding Fathers of the American Revolution, most prominently, Benjamin Franklin,
Dr. Benjamin Rush, John Adams, and Thomas Jefferson promoted exercise through their
writings.
• Women of all socioeconomic strata and ethnicities participated in sports in colonial America.
The following are suggestions for assignments and activities related to this chapter. Students
may do one or more to deepen their understanding of the history and philosophy of the time
period covered in this chapter, or develop similar group or individual projects using the text and
resources provided or other research.
1. Cross-cultural Understanding (Discussion): Watch the film Spirit Game: Pride of a Nation
(available from XLRator Media, http://www.xlratormedia.com/film/spirit-game-pride-nation)
to see how the game of lacrosse continues to serve as a vital part of the culture of the
Iroquois Nation. Hold a class discussion about the film and what it reveals about the role
of the game in their culture, the place of the Iroquois people in international sports, and
perceptions of the Iroquois in North American sports history.
2. Primary Sources Research (Research): Read Joseph Seccombe’s Business and diversion
inoffensive to God, and necessary for the comfort and support of human society. A
discourse utter’d in part at Ammauskeeg-Falls, in the fishing-season, available at https://
www.library.unh.edu/special/images/finaid/milne/seccombe.pdf. Starting at page 16, how
does he justify the sport of fishing from the standpoint of his religious beliefs?
3. Education Through the Physical (Research): Discuss the beliefs of Benjamin Franklin
and Dr. Benjamin Rush as they pertained to the development of educational institutions in
Pennsylvania (see text and References list for sources). What forms of physical education
did they recommend? For whom (e.g., men, women, different ethnicities, socioeconomic
levels)? At what institutions? Were their ideas implemented in schools?
4. Dance Reconstruction (Kinesthetic): Using the cue sheets available under “Education” at
www.lloydshaw.org and music recordings available at that site under “Store,” reconstruct
and dance a typical colonial American contra dance that came from England: the Virginia
Reel, Thady You Gander, or Weaver’s Reel. For additional research, do an online search for
the Virginia Reel and related dances. Notice that instructions and figures vary between
different sources. Why do you think that is? Is it important to always dance only the original
version? How could you research to find out what the earliest known version of the dance
might have been?
FIGURE CREDITS
Fig. 6.1: Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ball_players.jpg.
Fig. 6.2: Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:%27Militia_Training%27_by_James_G._
Clonney,_1841.JPG.
Fig. 6.3: Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Schuylkill_Fishing_Company.png.
REFERENCES
Ballou, R. B. (1976, April). Sports, physical activity and recreation in early American history.
Paper presented at the meeting of the National Association for Sport and Physical Education
(NASPE), American Alliance for Health, Physical Education, and Recreation (AAHPER),
Milwaukee, WI.
Becker, M. J. (1985, January). Lacrosse: Political organization in North America as reflected in
athletic competition. Expedition Magazine [Penn Museum], 27(2), 53–56.
Betts, J. R. (1968). Mind and body in early American thought. Journal of American History, 54(4),
787–805.
Butterfield, L. H. (Ed.). (1961). Diary and autobiography of John Adams, Vol. I: Diary 1755–1770.
Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.
Davis, T. R. (1972). Puritanism and physical education: The shroud of gloom lifted. Canadian
Journal of History of Sport & Physical Education, 3(1), 1–7.
Franklin, B. (1749). Proposals Relating to the Education of Youth in Pennsylvania. Retrieved from
https://archives.upenn.edu/digitized-resources/docs-pubs/franklin-proposals
Gems, G. R., Borish, L. J., & Pfister, G. (2017). Sports in American history: From colonization to
globalization. Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics.
Haag, M., & Millis, H. (2001). Choctaw Language & Culture: Chahta Anumpa. Norman, OK:
University of Oklahoma Press.
Irigoyen-Rascón, F., & Batista, J. M. P. (2012). Rarajípari: The kick-ball race of the Tarahumara
Indians (3rd ed.). Chihuahua, Mexico: Centro Librero la Prensa. Retrieved from https://www.
amazon.com/Rarajipari-Kick-Ball-Tarahumara-Indians-ebook/dp/B0092IUWFE
Jacques, A. (December 2018). [Conversation at Onondaga Nation from the Earth Craft Fair,
December 8].
Keith, S. E. (1999). Native American women in sport. Journal of Physical Education, Recreation,
and Dance, 70(4), 47–49.
Lumpkin, A. (2017). Introduction to physical education, exercise science, & sport (10th ed.). New
York, NY: McGraw-Hill Education.
Mather, C. (1721/1968). The Christian philosopher: A collection of the best discoveries in nature,
with religious improvements. Gainesville, FL: Scholars’ Facsimiles & Reprints.
Rasmussen, H. C. (2018). The life and death of raquette in nineteenth-century New Orleans.
Sport History Review, 49(1), 23–38.
Roberts, K., & Roberts, A. M. (Eds.). (1947). Moreau de St. Méry’s American Journey (1793–1798)
(K. Roberts & A. M. Roberts, Trans.). Garden City, NY: Doubleday.
Runes, D. D. (Ed.) (1947). The selected writings of Benjamin Rush. New York, NY: Philosophical
Library.
Seccombe, J. (1739/1743). Business and diversion inoffensive to God, and necessary for the comfort
and support of human society. A discourse utter’d in part at Ammauskeeg-Falls, in the fishing-
season. Boston, MA: S. Kneeland and T. Green. Retrieved from https://www.library.unh.edu/
special/images/finaid/milne/seccombe.pdf
allocated to physical activities. The revised simple clothing allowed great freedom of movement,
which was helpful because students spent three hours per day in physical recreation (dancing,
riding, and fencing, for example) and two hours per day in manual activity (carpentry, masonry,
and crafts). During the summer months, Basedow had the children learn to live in tents while
they practiced hunting, swimming, fishing, and boating. Basedow hired a teacher who is now
considered by many scholars to have been the first physical educator of the modern era, Johann
Friedrich Simon (Dixon, 1986; Mechikoff & Estes, 1998).
Johann Friedrich Simon’s curriculum was developmental and attuned to the natural
development of children. For younger children, participation in ancient Greek games and
contests strengthened their muscles and allowed for rough-and-tumble recreation. Older
students refined their physical skills with knightly activities such as riding, dancing, vaulting
(over live horses!), and fencing. Hand-eye coordination was encouraged through tennis, ball
games, and skittles, among other games (Mechikoff & Estes, 1998).
Despite Basedow’s reputation for being a difficult colleague, his novel approach to education
drew great educators to the Philanthropinum, including Christian Salzmann (1744–1811), who
worked under Basedow and founded his own school in 1784. Salzmann’s Schnepfenthal Institute
was patterned after Basedow’s Philanthropinum. A greater emphasis on outdoor activities,
healthy living with good food and lots of sleep and recreation time, and classrooms streaming
with light all contributed to the success of the Schnepfenthal Institute, which has survived to the
present (Dixon, 1986).
Saltzmann hired a young geography professor named Johann Friedrich GutsMuths (1759–
1839) whose additional abilities as a physical educator soon became apparent. GutsMuths took
Figure 7.3 Photo taken in 1931 of the oldest horse-vaulting apparatus in Germany.
Figure 7.4 Drawing of the Spiess turnplatz in Basel, Switzerland (1847), from his book on gymnastics for schoolchildren.
DANISH GYMNASTICS
In the history of Danish physical education,
one name stands above all in terms of
influence. Early in life, Franz Nachtegall
(1777–1847) had been an outstanding
fencer and gymnastic vaulter. When his
father, a German tailor who had settled in
Copenhagen, passed away, Nachtegall left
university studies to become a tutor. Like
GutsMuths, he taught geography. After
reading GutsMuths’s Gymnastik für die Jugend,
Nachtegall began teaching GutsMuths-style
gymnastics in addition to tutoring other
subjects. He opened a successful gymnasium
(using the familiar hanging ladders, balance
beam, vaulting horse, and poles) and also
taught at public and private schools.
It was perhaps also GutsMuths’s influence
as well as his own humble beginnings and love
of swimming that led Nachtegall to create the Figure 7.5 Danish physical education pioneer Franz Nachtegall
Society for Promoting the Art of Swimming, (1777–1847). His influence led to Denmark’s becoming the first
serving poorer Danish children with lessons European country to include physical training in its schools as
and competitive opportunities. He was soon an essential part of coursework.
SWEDISH GYMNASTICS
The Swedish system was created by Per Henrik Ling (1776–1839), who had studied with
Nachtegall in Denmark. Like many physical educators of the time, he had had some university
education but had dropped out and become a private tutor in academic subjects. However, his
decision to enroll in the University of Copenhagen and take up gymnastics and fencing changed
his life as he discovered the physical benefits of exercise in his own body.
Sweden suffered political losses in the Napoleonic wars due to an alliance with England that
allowed ships to use the ports of Sweden. In retribution, the Russians attacked Finland (in 1808,
it was part of Sweden), taking a vast amount of land. Following losses to the French in the
southern parts of the kingdom, King Gustavus IV Adolf of Sweden was removed by his own
forces in 1809 and replaced by his childless uncle, Charles XIII, whose powers were limited by
a new constitution and the Swedish Diet (ruling entity). An heir was found in a related French
aristocrat, who became Charles XIV in 1818.
Ling had been appointed fencing master of the Royal Military Academy in 1813, but with
the financial support of King Charles XIII, he established and directed the Royal Gymnastics
Central Institute in 1814. There, he devised a system using four general aspects of exercise:
• aesthetic,
• military,
• pedagogical, and
• medical.
With goals including harmonious development of the body following gradually increased
difficulty of exercises, a strong nationalist sentiment, and healthful unity of the mind and bodily
systems, Ling’s gymnastics differed from Jahn’s system mainly in the degree of complexity of the
exercises. Swedish gymnastics emphasized correct posture, sometimes forcing students to hold
positions for extended periods of time while teachers made corrections to achieve the precise
effect demanded by Ling (Mechikoff & Estes, 1998; Polidoro, 2000).
The equipment also varied from that used by German gymnastics. As a nation with extensive
coastlines, it was perhaps natural that a piece of wooden apparatus resembling a ship’s mast,
called a boom, was featured. Wooden stall bars were another innovation, resembling a ladder
with close-spaced rungs attached close to a wall. Oblique ropes, resembling a ship’s rigging, were
part of the gymnasium. In place of the German vault resembling a horse, Ling’s vaulting apparatus
was an ingenious set of interlocking boxes that could be adjusted to the height requirements of
different ages (Mechikoff & Estes, 1998).
In the realm of health, Ling is known as the father of physical therapy and developed the basis
of what came to be known as Swedish massage. His medical gymnastics was popularly called the
Swedish Movement Cure (Beck, 2010).
Ling’s son, Hjalmar Ling, carried Swedish gymnastics into the public schools throughout
Sweden. He initiated a series of exercises known as the Day’s Order, which covered 11 different
parts of the body in a systematic directed set of movements, providing an apparatus-free workout
that could be learned and used across the country by instructors of varying degrees of experience.
“Come, none of your irony, Brown,” answers the master. “I’m beginning to understand
the game scientifically. What a noble game it is, too.”
“Isn’t it? But it’s more than a game. It’s an institution,” said Tom.
“Yes,” said Arthur, “the birthright of British boys old and young, as habeas corpus and
trial by jury are of British men.”
“The discipline and reliance on one another which it teaches is so valuable I think,” went
on the master, “it ought to be such an unselfish game. It merges the individual in the
eleven; he doesn’t play that he may win, but that his side may.” (Hughes, p. 290)
Rather than practice sports drills or spend time trying to become virtuosic players, the British
schoolboy simply learned by playing the game. In terms of football (what we now call soccer), this
was not as simple as it sounds, because each public school had its own rules, and the rules were
different from the many versions of folk football played throughout Great Britain. Sometimes
even within a public school, the different houses (dormitories) would have different rules, and
negotiations over how many people could play for each side, how big the pitch (playing field)
would be, what would serve as goals, how big the goals would be, would holding or tackling be
allowed, and so forth could take a while. The games were self-regulated by students, so there
were no referees or coaches to determine boundaries or rules.
This obstacle to interschool play and intercity games led to different solutions. In the case
of Rugby, the school maintained its traditional rules and their game is now known by the name
of the school. For town residents who wanted to play, a different solution was found. In 1863,
the Football Association was formed to reach a standardized set of rules that would allow for
municipal teams to play other municipalities (Mangan, 1988). That led to what became known
as association football. The word soccer comes from British slang for the abbreviation for
association, or assoc. Fun fact. But we digress.
The British sports ideal carried over into the realm of amateur sport as a means of class-
consciousness. While the Football Association made intercity league play possible, it also led
to the rise of professional players, often from lower classes, who played for money rather than
for love of the game. They honed their skills with practice and dedication, devoting more time
and energy to their sport than could upper-class athletes who played on a much more casual
basis, as they had learned in their public school days (Harvey, 1999; Lewis, 1999). Despite initial
resistance by upper-class amateurs, eventually professionalism became the norm in league play,
and aristocrats found recreation in the more exclusive sporting pastimes of yachting, horseracing,
SUMMARY
Below is a summary of main points from the chapter. Take a moment to review the Guiding
Questions. Then, read this summary to see how the content in the chapter responds to those
questions.
• Numerous wars and rising nationalism in the 19th century led to increased demand for
physical education to improve health and strength along with patriotism.
• The main proponents of German gymnastics were Johann GutsMuths, Friedrich Jahn, and
Adolph Spiess. The main proponent of Danish gymnastics was Franz Nachtegall. The main
proponents of Swedish gymnastics were Per Henrick Ling and his son, Hjalmar Ling.
• The goals of the British sports ideal were to develop traits of loyalty, honesty, teamwork, good
sportsmanship, and leadership. Professionalism and excessive drilling in skills were seen as
incompatible with this model, which emphasized participation for the sake of playing the
game.
LEARNING ACTIVITIES
The following are suggestions for assignments and activities related to this chapter. Students
may do one or more to deepen their understanding of the history and philosophy of the time
period covered in this chapter, or develop similar group or individual projects using the text and
resources provided or other research.
2. Advocacy Research (Research): GutsMuths, Jahn, Nachtegall, Ling, and others succeeded
in convincing their countries’ leaders of the importance of physical education. Find at least
three translations of different authors who wrote about German, Danish, and Swedish
gymnastics in 19th-century Europe. What arguments did they use in their writing to
promote physical activity? Could some of the same arguments be used today? How did
they perceive the role of exercise for female education?
3. Literature, Film, and the British Sports Ideal (Research): Read or watch Tom Brown’s
School Days or Tom Brown at Oxford. What specific examples of incidents in the book or
film can you find which support the British sports’ muscular Christianity? Does this ideal
persist in Great Britain’s public schools today?
REFERENCES
Aldrich, E. (1991). From the ballroom to Hell: Grace and folly in nineteenth-century dance.
Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press.
Anderson, N. F. (2010). The sporting life: Victorian sports and games. Santa Barbara, CA: Praeger/
ABC-CLIO.
Baker, W. J. (1994). To pray or to play? The YMCA question in the United Kingdom and the
United States, 1850–1900. International Journal of the History of Sport, 11(1), 42–62.
Beck, M. F. (2010). Theory and practice of therapeutic massage. Clifton Park, NY: Milady (Cengage
Learning).
Carner, M. (1948). The waltz. London, England: Max Parrish.
Dine, P. (2003). For health and beauty: Physical culture for Frenchwomen, 1880s–1930s [Review
of the book For health and beauty: Physical culture for Frenchwomen, 1880s–1930s, by M. L.
Stewart]. International Journal of the History of Sport, 20(3), 164–165.
Dixon, J. G. (1986). Prussia, politics and physical education. In P. C. McIntosh, J. G. Dixon, A.
D. Munrow, & R. F. Willetts (Eds.), Landmarks in the history of physical education (rev. ed.)
(pp. 112–155). London, England: Routledge & Kegan Paul.
Garnham, N. (2001). Both playing and praying: “Muscular Christianity and the YMCA
in north-east County Durham. Journal of Social History, 35(2), 397–407. doi: 10.1353/
jsh.2001.0122
GutsMuths, J. C. F. (1793/1803). Gymnastics for youth, or, a practical guide to healthful and
amusing exercises: For the use of schools; an essay toward the necessary improvement of
education, chiefly as it relates to the body (unknown translator). Philadelphia, PA: P. Byrne.
Harvey, A. (1999). Football’s missing link: The real story of the evolution of modern football. In
J. A. Mangan (Ed.), Sport in Europe: Politics, Class, Gender (pp. 92–116). London, England:
Frank Cass.
Hughes, T. (1857/1923). Tom Brown’s school days. Philadelphia, PA: George W. Jacobs.
Lewis, R. W. (1999). “Touched pitch and been shockingly defiled”: Football, class, social
Darwinism and decadence in England, 1880–1914. In J. A. Mangan (Ed.), Sport in Europe:
Politics, Class, Gender (pp. 92–116). London, England: Frank Cass.
Jahn, 1828). For five years he contributed immensely to the school’s reputation for healthy
students, and his background as an ordained Lutheran minister dovetailed nicely with Bancroft’s
background in theology and concerns for the moral character of the students (Bennett, 1969).
Cogswell himself had initially taught physical activities, including football, swimming,
archery, ice hockey, dancing, riding, jumping, leaping, hunting, baseball, running, hiking,
wrestling, and camping. Beck’s contribution gave each student three hours per week of systematic
training, drawing on naturalistic methods derived from Jahn’s work. Games and sports were also
meant to “promote hilarity,” according to the founders (Cogswell & Bancroft, 1826, in Geldbach,
1976, p. 239). The fact that “hilarity” was one stated goal of required physical activity in an
academically rigorous school of that time period implies a positive affective culture at the school
without negating the importance of the physical training.
Cogswell served as a kindly father figure who sought balance between the necessity for
disciplined work and the need for rest and recreation. After Round Hill School closed, he went
on to found a similar school in Raleigh, North Carolina, and then to serve as a librarian for the
wealthy Astor family in New York City. Bancroft moved on to write histories and to serve in the
cabinet under President James Polk as Secretary of the Navy, where he created the United States
Naval Academy at Annapolis, Maryland. While neither made great contributions to the history
of physical education following their time at Round Hill, their careers further demonstrate
the caliber of these two men who believed vehemently in the roles of physical education and
dance should play as important components of comprehensive education. Through their efforts,
German gymnastics established its place as a leading system of fitness training. It would fall to
others to build on that foundation.
SWEDISH GYMNASTICS
Swedish immigration to the United States rose after 1860, and the influence of Swedish gymnastics
was not felt until the latter part of that century. There was interest in the physiotherapeutic
work of Swedish gymnast Per Henrik Ling, whose work on a precursor to what became known
as Swedish massage made quite an impact in the medical community. George Taylor (1860)
was among those who brought Ling’s principles to North America during the early upsurge in
medical treatment issues, with a lengthy volume extolling the virtues of the Swedish Movement
Cure. The movement cure consisted of prescribed exercises for various parts of the body (medical
gymnastics) and massage, along with recommendations for diet, hygiene, and environmental
factors such as light and temperature. Women and men were encouraged to use the cure in
Taylor’s book, and a section on education reflects Hjalmar Ling’s Day’s Order (see Chapter 7) and
strongly urges that physical education be included in schools.
Figure 8.4 Advertisement for mechanical massage appliance available at George Taylor’s Movement Cure Institute
in New York City, 1887.
DELSARTISM
During the last three decades of the 1800s, students of French singing, acting, and movement
instructor François Delsarte (1811–1871) shared his Delsarte System of Physical Culture
in the United States via classes and performances using his teachings (Polidoro, 2000).
Expression and relaxation through movement was at the core of Delsartism, which he called
applied aesthetics. Steele Mackaye, Emily Bishop, Genevieve Stebbins and Henrietta Hovey
were among the most important teachers of Delsartism in North America. Performances of
costumed enactors posed as statues, performed dances and pantomimes, and made living
recreations of famous paintings (often with classical themes) known as tableaux mouvants or
tableaux vivants. These were commonly featured in amateur and professional variety shows,
community celebrations, recitals, and school presentations across the country, reaching a peak
Beecher’s calisthenics were the basis of physical education for girls at Emma Willard’s Troy
Female Seminary in New York State. Women’s fitness advocates Mary Lyon of Holyoke and
Catharine Beecher both encouraged Willard to include physical education in her academy from
1821, early in its history. Sports were also part of the educational program there. While Round
Hill School is generally cited as the first school in the United States to require physical education,
Round Hill was actually the first to have a physical education teacher, but not the first to require
physical education: that honor goes to Emma Willard’s school (Kendall, 1973; Leepson, 1992).
During the mid-1900s, tremendous interest in health education and reforms swept the
United States in response to urbanization and industrialization. In Boston, William Ellery
Channing and Dr. Lemuel Shattuck studied overcrowding in Boston, and in New York City, an
Association for the Improvement of the Condition of the Poor published its first report in 1845.
Scotsmen George Combe, author of Constitution of Man (1828) and Dr. Andrew Combe (his
younger brother, fellow phrenologist, and author of Principles of Physiology (1834) and Physiology
of Digestion (1836)) exerted tremendous influence in the United States toward modernization of
What America needs is the happy combination which the European nations are trying
to effect: the strength-giving qualities of the German Gymnasium, the active and
energetic properties of the English sports, the grace and suppleness acquired from
French calisthenics, and the beautiful poise and mechanical precision of the Swedish
free movements, all regulated, systematized, and adapted to our peculiar needs and
institutions. (Sargent, 1889)
The Swedish gymnastics instructor Hartvig Nissen later commented in 1892 that the Swedish
system was a good one when funding for fully equipped gymnasia was not possible, but he also
recommended the additional use of German gymnastics for strengthening (Nissen, 1892). Like
the Delsarte teacher Bishop, he believed a mixture of different systems would yield the best
physical results.
There was no clear winner, nor even an exact time period, for the so-called Battle of the
Systems. It was less a battle than a national conversation. The era of the founding of AAPE and
the Conference in the Interest of Physical Training, however, represents a moment in time in
which diverse practitioners of physical education were beginning to work together toward the
goal of providing fitness opportunities for all, recognizing the benefits of alternative methods.
SUMMARY
Below is a summary of main points from the chapter. Take a moment to review the Guiding
Questions. Then, read this summary to see how the content in the chapter responds to those
questions.
The following are suggestions for assignments and activities related to this chapter. Students
may do one or more to deepen their understanding of the history and philosophy of the time
period covered in this chapter, or develop similar group or individual projects using the text and
resources provided or other research.
1. Mental Mapping (Visual): Find images of major leaders and teachers of 19th-century
physical education in the United States. Create a sort of “family tree” (or several trees),
showing the connections between the earliest teachers of German gymnastics, Swedish
gymnastics, and other systems as they evolved over the course of the century.
2. Research and Reflection (Research): Hartvig Nissen wrote in 1892 that the
Delsarte system was hardly a system at all, and that it was not based on physiological
principles. He said that it was sometimes being used simply to make money. Read
Bishop’s Americanized Delsarte Culture (1892) at https://books.google.com/books/
about/Americanized_Delsarte_Culture.html?id=FEoMAAAAYAAJ&printsec=frontcove
r&source=kp_read_button#v=onepage&q&f=false. What do you think? Do you agree
or disagree with Nissen’s assessment, and why or why not? For additional research,
see Genevieve Stebbins’s Society Gymnastics and Voice Culture: Adapted from the
Delsarte System (1888) at https://books.google.com/books?id=af7_D1n6rtUC&printse
c=frontcover&dq=Stebbins+gymnastic&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjt0ZSZvb7hAhW
tm-AKHeZVBdAQ6AEIKjAA#v=onepage&q=Stebbins%20gymnastic&f=false.
4. Field Trip (Outreach): Is there a turnverein near your school? Arrange a visit and speak with
someone there about current turner activities in the United States, or invite someone to
come speak to your class. For a list of American turners, see http://www.americanturners.
com/Districts.
FIGURE CREDITS
Fig. 8.1: Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:RoundHillSchool_ca1830s_
NorthamptonMA_byPendleton.png.
Fig. 8.2: Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Vita-follen.jpg.
Fig. 8.3: Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Milwaukee_Turnverein_1866.jpg.
REFERENCES
Atkinson, P. (1985). Strong minds and weak bodies: Sports, gymnastics and the medicalization
of women’s education. British Journal of Sports History, 2(1), 62–71.
Barney, R. K. (1982). Knights of cause and exercise: German Forty-Eighters and turnvereine in
the United States during the antebellum period. Canadian Journal of History of Sport, 13(2),
62–79.
Beck, C. (1828). Treatise on gymnastics taken chiefly from the German of F. L. Jahn. Northampton,
MA: Simeon Butler.
Beecher, C. E. (1856/1860). Calisthenic exercises for schools, families, and health establishments.
New York, NY: Harper & Brothers. Retrieved from https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uiu
g.30112039722522;view=1up;seq=5
Bennett, B. L. (1969). Reflections on Round Hill. In Proceedings of the First International Seminar
on the History of Physical Education and Sport (April 9–11, 1968). Uriel Simri, Ed. Netanya,
Israel: Wingate Institute for Physical Education, pp. 13-1–13-8.
Betts, J. R. (1968). Mind and body in early American thought. Journal of American History, 54(4),
787–805.
Bishop, E. M. (1892). Americanized Delsarte culture. Meadville, PA: Chautauqua-Century
Press. Retrieved from https://books.google.com/books/about/Americanized_Delsarte_
Culture.html?id=FEoMAAAAYAAJ&printsec=frontcover&source=kp_read_button#v=
onepage&q&f=false
Brief outline of the life and work of Dr. Delphine Hanna. (1941). Research Quarterly of the
American Association for Health and Physical Education, 12(3), 646–652.
Cogswell, J. C., & Bancroft, G. (1823). Prospectus of a school to be established at Round Hill,
Northampton, Massachusetts. Cambridge, MA: University Press.
Cogswell, J. C., & Bancroft, G. (1826). Some account of the school for the liberal education of boys,
established on Round Hill (pamphlet). Northampton, Massachusetts.
De la Peña, C. (2003). Dudley Allen Sargent: Health machines and the energized male body. Iron
Game History, 8(2), 1–19.
Telegraphic meet: form of competition in which the popular in the late 19th and early 20th
participants compete at different campuses and send the centuries?
results via telegraph to another location, where winners
are determined • How did society view women’s inter
Intramural sports: sports in which all competitors are from collegiate athletics during this time
the same institution; literally, “within the walls” of a single
period?
college or university, for example
Figure 9.1 Engraving of famous mid-19th-century trotting horse Artaxerxes, from American Turf
Register and Sporting Magazine (1839).
PERCUSSIVE DANCE
Factory workers sometimes engaged in a different type of competition. To alleviate the tedium
of long hours on the factory floor, workers would sometimes shuffle and stamp their feet,
mimicking and dancing in rhythms that complemented the regular sounds of the machines.
The striking of their hobnailed or heavy boots on the floors was a form of percussive dance.
Other forms of percussive dance include American tap dance, Appalachian clogging, hambone
(in which the hands strike the thighs and torso), Spanish zapateado, German Schuhplattler, some
Native American dances, Lancashire and Cape Breton clogging, Argentinian malambo, South
African gumboot dance, stepping (or step dance) of US historically black college and university
fraternities and sororities, a form of Indian Kathak dance, and Tibetan step dance.
Immigrants brought these percussive dances with them from abroad, and in some cases they
influenced other dance forms. For example, the dances performed by slaves and freedmen were
sometimes performed in proximity to the dances of Irish immigrants, in carnivals, medicine
shows, riverboats, inner-city bars, minstrel shows, and variety shows, with dancers trading (not
to say stealing) each other’s steps as the form now known as tap dance evolved. After the Civil
War, migration of freed slaves toward the northern cities of Chicago, Philadelphia, Boston,
and New York City combined with national tours of minstrel shows, variety shows, and later
vaudeville to popularize percussive dance across the continent.
There was a downside, however. Racial stereotypes carried over into tap performances,
with both black and white minstrel show performers working in blackface and perpetuating
the myth of the happy, dancing African American. The stereotype was so pervasive that even
(Mullan, 2012). Retaining a sense of cultural identity through active traditions such as these
was an important part of the immigrant experience for many of the millions who left their
homelands for new opportunities.
ORGANIZED SPORTS
The history of organized sports in the United States.
during the time period of this chapter follows three
pathways: amateur sport, collegiate sport, and
professional sport. There are overlapping individual
and group histories within each of these areas, but let’s
take a look at some examples of each, contextualizing
some events and highlighting others.
Several technological advances changed the world
of competitive sport during this time. The telegraph,
for example, was patented in 1837 and telegraph lines
had been installed worldwide by 1902. The rapid
communication afforded by this device facilitated travel,
gambling, and reporting of results of competitions.
In the late 1800s, the telephone provided even more
convenience. Rail, subway, and canal travel, all great
innovations in themselves, were supplemented or
replaced by automotive and plane travel, expanding
opportunities for spectators and competitors alike to
Figure 9.4 Known as “the father of physical culture,” Bernarr experience sports beyond their local facilities and teams.
Macfadden (1868–1955) promoted health through Society was changing, too. As early as 1908, a
hydrotherapy, fasting, fitness, and a healthy lifestyle. His spinning mill in New England began operating on a
magazine company, Macfadden Publications, published a five-day week to give Jewish workers their Sabbath
number of fitness and sports magazines, often featuring his
on Saturday. Other manufacturers followed, and with
photograph in various poses. Some of his recommendations
the weekend established, more recreational time was
drew the ire of the medical community for his promotion of
nonmedical “cures.”
made available. Leisure time allowed for more sporting
Figure 9.5 The New York Athletic Club four-oar senior crew of 1911.
of all Thoroughbred horses in the American Stud Book, a genealogy of horses. It also took on
the task of licensing jockeys, and since they did not reregister blacks after the Jockey Club was
founded, it effectively barred them from that sport (Zirin, 2008).
Prizefighting (fighting for money or other benefits) was nothing new, and it could be brutal.
Bare-knuckle fighting had been outlawed in many parts of the United States by the middle of the
1800s. Those modern gladiators, however, were assisted by the efforts of a P. T. Barnum–like
promoter named Richard Kyle Fox, owner of the National Police Gazette. He was known for
publicizing sports such as canoeing and archery, and the banner of the publication called it the
“leading illustrated sporting journal in America” (Reel, 2001, p. 74), though its pages awarded
prizes to dancers, egg-eaters, drinkers, and oyster shuckers as well as more athletic events. One
unusual award was the belt given by Fox to Billy Wells because he was named “champion of
allowing his head to be pounded through an iron block by means of a sledge hammer” (Reel,
2001, p. 74).
Fox capitalized on boxing matches, especially those featuring John L. Sullivan, by sponsoring
ring matches, with prizes, cash, and belts as incentives for the fighters. The National Police
Gazette, in turn, sold more papers, and the increased circulation and related business ventures
made him a millionaire and allowed Fox to award more costly belts and prizes. Along the way,
he fought for the legitimization of bare-knuckle fighting through a court case and in his books
on boxing (Reel, 2001).
A more genteel sport, rowing nevertheless did not have a pristine history during the 19th
century. Professional rowers had competed since mid-century, sometimes alongside amateur
The rise in professional sports from its amateur beginnings is thanks in large part to the efforts
of sports promoters and entrepreneurs who built empires out of professional clubs, merchandise,
stadiums, and equipment. By the middle of the 20th century, professional:
• baseball (1869 first professional team, the Cincinnati Red Stockings/1871 National
Association of Professional Base Ball Players (player-centered)/1876 National League
(club-centered)),
• boxing (1921 National Boxing Association),
• football (1920, American Professional Football Association, became National Football
League in 1922),
• basketball (1925 American Basketball League/1949 National Basketball Association;
1978 Women’s Professional Basketball League/1997 Women’s National Basketball
Association),
• ice hockey (1917, National Hockey League, in Canada), and even
• professional wrestling (a combination of sport and theater) were all well established.
(Polidoro, 2000; Zeigler, 1988).
It is important to note, however, that in many cases throughout history, players were paid
openly or secretly, before professional associations were formed. This is especially evident in
boxing, which was formerly known as prizefighting. Organizations were formed to regulate what
was already happening to one degree or another.
Figure 9.10 Members of the 1913 Cornell University football team. This photo was taken long before helmets were
mandatory in college football.
Figure 9.11 The Oregon Agricultural College (now Oregon State University) women’s basketball team, 1900.
SUMMARY
Below is a summary of main points from the chapter. Take a moment to review the Guiding
Questions. Then, read this summary to see how the content in the chapter responds to those
questions.
• Some opportunities for work-related sports activities in North America in the 1800s included
agricultural competitions at fairs, lumberjack sports, rodeos, and office work contests.
• Percussive dance includes dance movements in which sounds are made by striking parts of
the body against the floor or against other body parts. It can be used in physical education
to teach rhythm, agility, coordination, balance, and sociocultural history.
• Some examples of sports brought to North America by immigrants during this time period
are Caledonian games like caber tossing and Irish sports such as hurling.
• Before and after the Civil War, enslaved African Americans participated in swimming,
horseracing, fighting, bicycling, and dancing, to name a few recreational activities. After
the Civil War and well into the 20th century, freedmen and their descendants sometimes
became professional jockeys, baseball players, and dancers, but regulations and unwritten
rules severely limited their opportunities or denied them altogether.
• Amateur athletics, strictly speaking, are events in which unpaid athletes compete for the
love of sport rather than for money. They are important during the era covered by this
chapter not only because they provided countless opportunities for participation in sports
for all, but also because, in some cases, clubs established for amateurs formed the basis for
professional athletic activities.
• Among the most popular professional sports of the late 19th and early 20th centuries were
rowing, prizefighting, baseball, and horseracing.
• During this time period, society viewed women’s competitive intercollegiate athletics as
unfit for women, potentially dangerous to their bodies and minds, and a threat to their
morality and femininity.
The following are suggestions for assignments and activities related to this chapter. Students
may do one or more to deepen their understanding of the history and philosophy of the time
period covered in this chapter, or develop similar group or individual projects using the text and
resources provided or other research.
1. Popcorn and a Movie (Visual): Many popular films and excellent documentaries about the
history of sports during this time period are available. Individually, in groups, or as a class,
gather and watch a film such as A League of Their Own, 42, Life in the Negro Leagues:
There Was Always Sun Shining Someplace. All are available for online streaming. Discuss
reactions to the presentation. Popcorn is optional (but highly recommended).
2. War and Sports History (Research): War has had significant effects on sports throughout
history. In the era covered by this chapter, reconstruction aides in World War I developed
early methods of physical therapy, baseball pitcher Christy Mathewson served in the United
States Army Chemical Development Unit in World War I and was exposed to chemicals that
cut short his career, and the National Football League lost so many players to the World
War II draft that the Steelers and Eagles had to combine to become the Steagles (the
Phil-Pitt Eagles-Steelers Combine) in 1943. Research one of these topics and give a brief
presentation to the class using classroom technology such as PowerPoint.
3. Try Tapping (Kinesthetic): If one of the students in your class knows how to tap dance,
have him or her teach a short combination of easy steps to the class. Alternatively, invite a
tap dance teacher to visit the class, or watch and learn from an online video such as https://
www.youtube.com/watch?v=_FnNPHTpJ8Y
4. Caledonian Games or Irish Competitions (Outreach): If you live near a place that holds
Scottish games or Irish competitions during the semester, arrange a field trip or invite
someone who participates in Irish or Scottish athletic or dance competitions to visit your
class. Lists of competitions can be found online. (Note: an Irish competition might also be
known as a fleadh (pronounced flah), oirachtas (o-ROCK-tus), or feis (pronounced fesh.)
FIGURE CREDITS
Fig. 9.1: Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Artaxerxesengravingamturfregister
sportingmag.jpg.
Fig. 9.2: Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Jesse_Owens_and_Bill_Bojangles_
Robinson_1936.jpg.
REFERENCES
Atkinson, P. (1985). Strong minds and weak bodies: Sports, gymnastics and the medicalization
of women’s education. British Journal of Sports History, 2(1), 62–71.
Betts, J. R. (1968). Mind and body in early American thought. Journal of American History, 54(4),
787–805.
Bullough, V. (1987). Technology for the prevention of “Les maladies produites par la
masturbation.” Technology and Culture, 28(4), 828–832. doi:10.2307/3105184
Duggan, A. S. (1932). Tap dances. New York, NY: A. S. Barnes.
Friss, E. (2019). On bicycles: A 200-year history of cycling in New York City. New York, NY:
Columbia University Press.
Gee, E. R. (1971). Early American sporting books: 1734–1844. New York, NY: Haskell House.
Gems, G. R., Borish, L. J., and Pfister, G. (2017). Sports in American history: From colonization to
globalization. Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics.
Gerber, E. (1975). Controlled development of collegiate sport for women, 1923–1936. Journal of
Sport History, 2(1), 1–28.
Goodman, J. D. (2010, January 19). The bittersweet history of bike clubs [Web log post].
New York Times. Retrieved from https://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/01/19/
the-bittersweet-history-of-bike-clubs/
Heaphy, L. A. (2003). The Negro Leagues, 1869–1960. Jefferson, NC: McFarland.
Henderson, R. W. (1977). Early American sport: A checklist of books by American and foreign
authors published in America prior to 1860 including sporting songs (3rd ed.). Cranbury, NJ:
Associated University Presses.
Jones, B., & Hawes, B. L. (1972). Step it down: Games, plays, songs, and stories from the Afro-
American heritage. New York, NY: Harper & Row.
Kenow, L. J. (2010). The All-American Girls Professional Baseball League (AAGPBL): A review
of literature and its reflection of gender issues. Women in Sport & Physical Activity Journal,
19(1), 58+.
Lussana, S. (2010). To see who was best on the plantation: Enslaved fighting contests and
masculinity in the antebellum plantation South. Journal of Southern History, 76(4),
901–922.
Physical Education and Sport in the 20th and Early 21st Centuries 149
(Key Terms and Concepts, continued)
Semiprofessionals: athletes who are paid but
do not work as paid competitors full time when your team won a championship, or the freedom
or year-round you feel when you are engaged in physical activity,
Pro-am: athletes who compete for cash prizes consider why those opportunities and events are part
at tournaments but are not fully employed of your story and your place in the world, and how
as professionals or whose status fluctuates they connect you to the wider history and philosophy
through time; could be classified in the of sport and physical education.
professional amateur category; some
events, like pro-am golf tournaments,
combine professionals and celebrities for
charitable causes LEADERS IN 20TH-CENTURY PHYSICAL
Free agency: the ability of a professional EDUCATION: THE PROGRESSIVE ERA
athlete to negotiate their own contracts
and solicit offers to change teams, with
In response to the problems of early-20th-century
some restrictions
society such as urbanization, industrialization,
Reserve clauses: under professional sports immigration, and corruption at all levels of government,
contracts, players could be traded, sold, various reforms and efforts at social activism ushered
released, or reassigned by the owners of in the progressive era (roughly 1890–1920) in the
a team with whom they signed a contract;
United States and Canada. Educational reform was
these controls were known as reserve
clauses and have largely been eliminated part of these efforts. The direction taken by physical
educators during that time and into the mid-20th
Title IX: an amendment to the Civil Rights Act of century became known as the new physical education
1964, prohibiting discrimination in education (or sometimes, modern physical education).
against anyone on the basis of sex
The new physical education emphasized more
The 13 program areas: in Title IX, a list of outdoor activities, individual-centered activities,
program areas to be checked for compliance natural exercises, physical examination, and separation
with the law; these include things like of the sexes at age 12. It deemphasized health as a main
provision of equipment and supplies, goal of physical education, and it downplayed—but
publicity, and travel per diem allowance
did not eliminate—many of the artificial exercises
Individualized education plan (IEP): a and activities used in calisthenics and European
document developed by schools in gymnastics systems. Generally speaking, the goals
cooperation with parents of children with were:
special needs to describe what programs
or services will be provided to the student;
•
corrective (overcoming postural defects with
the student may be involved, if appropriate
assessment help from the Bancroft Posture Test,
Inclusion: placing a student with special needs for example),
into a classroom with peers and support •
educational (for motor, social, and expressive
services skills as well as moral training),
Individualized transition plan (ITP): a plan to • hygienic, and
help students with special needs transition • recreative (Barber, 1923).
from school to community living; this is a
part of an IEP for students aged 16 and over Spontaneous play, athletics, games, dancing,
Paralympics: founded by Ludwig Guttmann in and sports were all part of the new programming,
1960, these are elite athletic competitions in which school activities were supplemented by
for persons with disabilities the availability of playground facilities, the YMCA
and similar associations, improvement in physical
educator training through normal schools and higher
Physical Education and Sport in the 20th and Early 21st Centuries 151
and Cassidy, but went even further in his belief
that athletics, games, and dancing should all be
organized and directed toward the function they
can play in the lives of the participants (Williams,
1930, 1939). For him, the three aspects of life most
affected by physical activities are “the biologic, the
social, and the political” (Williams, 1926, p. 292).
Proper and sufficient motor development, he
believed, was the basis of physical education at the
most basic neuromuscular level. However, some
social goals such as the reduction of delinquency
and maladjustment could be attained by teaching
youth to use their leisure time wisely in wholesome
recreational pursuits. Those habits would hopefully
continue past the school years, with morals and
good character instilled by physical education.
Finally, the physical and moral development of
students would contribute politically to national
strength and safety while instilling lifelong habits
of vitality and health (Williams, 1926).
Clark Hetherington (1870–1942) actually
coined the phrase New Physical Education
in his 1910 article, “Fundamental Education”
(Thomas, 1985). Like his contemporaries Wood
Figure 10.1 The Bancroft Test: using a pole (such as
and Williams, he was influenced by Rousseau’s
those used to open high windows), the observer can see
naturalism, Friedrich Froebel’s views on play as
whether a body is in correct alignment. essential to child development, and G. Stanley
Hall’s interest in childhood play. Hetherington
believed in education as a socializing influence on
children, which helped them to adjust to society’s expectations and demands. Through his work
in various institutions of education across the United States, particularly at the Universities of
Missouri, Wisconsin, and California (Berkeley), he advocated for the place of physical education in
higher education as a requirement for graduation from secondary and postsecondary educational
institutions and for the creation of undergraduate and postgraduate physical education teacher
preparation programs (Bandy, 1985).
His work was not always appreciated by his colleagues. After he had founded the Missouri
Valley Conference for collegiate athletics in 1907 and worked as a representative to the
Intercollegiate Athletic Association (now known as the NCAA), Hetherington’s strong views
concerning intercollegiate athletics as play rather than as spectacle led him to propound strict
ideas about the value of amateurism over professionalism. Those ideas were not in keeping with
those of his fellow administrators at Missouri and led to his resignation from that institution in
1910 (Bandy, 1985; Thomas, 1985; Tipton, 2013).
Another early-to-mid-20th-century leader, Charles McCloy (1886–1959), also found himself
at odds with other physical educators from time to time. His education of the physical was
seen by some, including Williams, as a retreat from what were then current views on physical
education, in which athletics and games for the development of social, moral, and physical
education were in vogue. This came about partly because he had called for more strength training
and concentrated on the physical (psychomotor) side of physical education more than on the
affective domain in his research and writing (English, 1983/2013).
Arguably, the characterization of his work as education of the physical might have been due, at
least in part, to his focus on the development and use of updated and improved measurements for
physical fitness. He himself denied that classification: his belief in the power of physical education
to promote mental and emotional health, for example, is clear in his writings (McCloy, 1933,
1937). That being said, tests such as the McCloy Strength Test, the McCloy Test of Present Health
(a cardiovascular rating scale), a General Motor Capacity Test, and a General Motor Ability Test
were only a few of the many instruments he designed. His textbook, Tests and Measurement in
Health and Physical Education (1939), and his work with the Research Council of AAHPERD
drove scientific research in kinesiology forward at a time when national interest in physical
education tests was being driven by concerns for health and national security (English, 1983).
AAHPERD’s successor organization, SHAPE America, continues the research work of
McCloy in measurements of physical fitness in schoolchildren. In a lecture for SHAPE America,
Welk (2017) credited McCloy for having laid the groundwork for such widely used testing
instruments as Charles L. Sterling’s FitnessGram®. McCloy’s legacy of professional research in
physical testing set a high standard for physical education and kinesiology studies, furthering
the academic stature and credibility of the profession.
Physical Education and Sport in the 20th and Early 21st Centuries 153
Figure 10.3 Students at an elementary school on a military base in Okinawa running a FitnessGram® pacer test.
In the latter half of the 20th century, revisions to physical education pedagogy have often
tended toward more student-centered and analytical models. Mosston’s 1966 textbook Teaching
Physical Education helped instructors rethink teaching strategies. The possibility of allowing
more student decision-making about their participation was considered revolutionary during
an era of teacher-directed instruction. The British public school sports model found new life in
the Teaching Games for Understanding (TGfU) model, updated by three teachers at England’s
Loughborough University in the 1980s. Thorpe, Bunker, and Almond modified game structures
to create strategical problems for students to solve. This gave their students skills and a deep
understanding of strategy to apply in actual games (Metzler, 2007). Griffin, Mitchell, and Oslin
brought the use of games to teach skills to the United States in 1997 with their book Teaching
Sport Concepts and Skills: A Tactical Games Approach.
Further emphasis on the affective domain of physical education continued on the work of the
British sports model and American pioneers such as Wood and Williams. Hellison’s Teaching
Responsibility Through Physical Activity (2003) promoted purposive physical education via his
Personal-Social Responsibility (PSR) model, and Siedentop’s Sport Education curriculum and
instructional model (SEM), expounded in Sport Education: Quality PE Through Positive Sport
Experiences (1994) emphasized the positive outcomes of competitive sports, such as cooperation,
leadership, peer teaching, and shared responsibility (Metzler, 2007).
LEISURE
Throughout the history of the United States, a work ethic derived from religious and societal
imperatives has often impeded the pursuit of leisure as a good or worthy objective. We have
Figure 10.4 Fishing has long been regarded as an excellent outdoor leisure activity.
Physical Education and Sport in the 20th and Early 21st Centuries 155
1930. During the mid-1960s, the organization combined with other similar groups and became
known as the National Park and Recreation Association (NRPA) (Frost, 2012).
Two associations within the American Alliance for Health, Physical Education, Recreation
and Dance (AAHPERD), the American Association for Leisure and Recreation (AALR, founded
1939) and the American Association for Active Lifestyles and Fitness (AAALF, founded 1949)
merged to become the American Association for Physical Activity and Recreation (AAPAR) in
2005. In 2013, AAPAR was folded into AAHPERD, which became the Society for Health and
Physical Educators (SHAPE America) and essentially disappeared along with the recreational
councils (the Council for Aquatic Professionals, for example) that had been founded under
AAPAR (Katchmarchi & Lorenzi, 2016).
One of the leaders in recreation studies in the 1900s was Jay Nash (1886–1965). Nash was a
student under Clark Hetherington at UC Berkeley and before that had played football at Oberlin
College, coached by Jesse Williams. As a recreation professional, he convinced the city of Oakland,
California, to fund two camps in the Sierra Mountains and to open schools, community buildings,
and parks for recreation during evening hours, weekends, and even holidays. One of the five
original founders of the American Academy of Physical Education (AAPE), he became president
of AAHPER during World War II. During his tenure, AAHPER used the theme National War
Fitness in support of sports and games to teach physical conditioning, endurance, agility, team
cooperation, courage, combat, ruggedness, and the will to win (Jable, 1985; Nash, 1943). While
he acknowledged that this initiative was primarily directed at men, he also explicitly stated that
it applied to females (Nash, 1928, 1943).
The influence of John Dewey on Nash’s beliefs was evident in his pragmatic commitment
to the preservation of democracy and individual freedoms through education. Athletics and
productive use of leisure time (such as camping) would help Americans fight the scourges of
Figure 10.5 Jay Nash favored so-called “carryover sports,” which participants could do throughout their lives.
Golf, tennis, and swimming were examples of these types of sports.
AMATEUR SPORT
In 1909, Hetherington had described amateurism as “sport for sport’s sake” (p. 568), and he went
on to form an Athletic Research Society to study amateurism and athletic program administration
(Tipton, 2013). The question of what makes an athlete a professional goes beyond Hetherington’s
belief that external motivations such as being paid and pleasing spectators are what determine
professionalism. Even in his day, gray areas existed. Collegiate players were sometimes paid
to play sports like football, and 1912 Olympian Jim Thorpe’s medals were rescinded (restored
in 1983) when he was ruled by the International Olympic Committee to have violated the rules
of amateur standing because he had played semiprofessional baseball.
Since the beginning of the modern Olympics
in 1896, founder Pierre de Coubertin and the
International Olympic Committee had tried
to restrict the Olympics to nonspecialists in
sports to promote fairness in the competitions.
This attitude of amateurism had been prevalent
in British sports and was, to a large extent, a
remnant of the aristocratic class privilege of the
1800s, when specialization and dedication to
a sport were considered vulgar and worthy of
disdain. Only people of a lower socioeconomic
standing accepted money for athletic contests
because they needed to be paid in order to
have financial support while they trained for
competition. However, when professionals
competed against amateurs, the professionals
were seen as having an unfair advantage due to
their ongoing training regimens.
As of 2019, the line between amateurs
and professionals in the Olympics has all but
been obliterated. Whereas at one time, even
accepting money for teaching a sport qualified
an athlete as a professional under Olympic Figure 10.6 James Francis Thorpe (Jim Thorpe, 1887–1953)
standards, nowadays, professionals often was a member of the Sac and Fox Nation. He was the first
compete along with amateurs. This is partially indigenous American to win gold medals in the Olympics,
due to the late-20th-century practice of winning both the pentathlon and the decathlon in the 1912
Eastern Bloc countries (during the Cold War, Stockholm Olympic Games.
Physical Education and Sport in the 20th and Early 21st Centuries 157
any who were under Soviet Union influence),
which trained athletes year-round under a
professional amateur state-sponsored model.
The lines were blurred even further with
corporate sponsorships of athletes and the
general rise of commercialism in the Olympics.
Particularly in the television age, the political
importance allocated to nationalistic medal
counts and the desire to see professionals in
the competitions exerted pressures to satisfy
spectators, thus selling more tickets to events
and generating higher viewership ratings.
The notion of fairness has gradually shifted
away from an unfair advantage on the part
of professionals to an unfair advantage of
some amateurs over others; slowly, the myth
Figure 10.7 Venus Williams, professional tennis player, at the
of the amateur ideal is fading as reality sets in
French Open in 2012. Later that year, she and her sister,
(Higdon, 1979; Llewellyn & Gleaves, 2016).
Serena, earned Olympic gold medals in doubles competition, A desire to preserve American athletic
and Serena won the singles event. prestige abroad and the recognition of
the Soviet dominance in the Olympics of
the 1960s and 1970s were key factors in the
passage of the 1978 Amateur Sports Act. The act centralized control of US athletic participation
in international competitions and placed it in the hands of the US Olympic Committee and
various sport governing bodies. The Amateur Sports Act has benefited mostly elite athletes
and has been criticized for not providing more opportunities for mass participation, especially
during the current obesity epidemic in the United States. Despite a 1998 revision specifically
requiring that Paralympics be included, in practice funding and administrative efforts have
not resulted in equal opportunities for athletes with disabilities (Hunt, 2007). On the other
hand, opportunities for advanced kinesiology and sports medicine research eventually
benefited elite athletes through national governing bodies (NGBs). Subsequent legislation
and cooperation between sports medicine groups and NGBs has continued to benefit athletes
(Burke, 1981).
The Amateur Sports Act reduced the role of the Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) and the
NCAA in international competition qualification events but left them with authority in their
spheres of national events. The AAU continues to provide amateur competitive opportunities
and physical fitness. It still coordinates the AAU Junior Olympics and provides diverse sports
opportunities for its 700,000 members of all ages. Dance, baton twirling, trampoline, sport cup
stacking, and jump rope are also offered through the AAU.
The NCAA, meanwhile, continues to require amateur standing for collegiate athletes. Their
position on this has become problematic in an age of astronomical coaching salaries for some
Division I revenue-generating sports such as football and basketball. Commercial sponsorship
by corporations such as Nike and Adidas has allegedly led to some issues concerning payments
for recruitment of players.
International students who are recruited to play Division I have faced additional difficulties
due to differences in regulations abroad. For example, the court case of Buckton v. NCAA (1973)
PROFESSIONALISM
As the notions of amateurism have changed over the course of the 20th and 21st centuries,
designations of various levels of payment for engagement in sport have been developed. Some
athletes are paid but don’t play their sport full time or year-round. Semiprofessionals fall into
this category. Junior ice hockey players in Canada, indoor American football players, lower-level
baseball players, and American lacrosse players are among those competing in this economic
category. Some short-term sporting events like charity golf tournaments in which celebrities
are teamed with professional golfers are designated as pro-am (professional-amateur). Many
in the dance world earn at least some of their annual income working in these categories, due
to employment in part-time or short contracts for seasons, rather than year-round salaried
positions.
Professionals, generally speaking, have lives dedicated to the sport(s) in which they
specialize. It is extraordinary for an athlete to achieve professional status in more than one sport.
American Bo Jackson was the first professional of the modern era to compete in both football
and baseball in the same year, earning him a contract with crossover Nike footwear in the Bo
Knows marketing campaign. Others,
like Dave DeBusschere (baseball, then
basketball), Tim Tebow (football, then
baseball), and Deion “Neon Deion”
Sanders (football, then baseball), have
had successful consecutive careers. In
fact, Sanders was the only individual to
have played in both a Super Bowl and a
World Series.
Such athletes are extremely rare.
Most earn their salaries while they are
still young enough to play and risk
injuries (sometimes irreversible) or
even death to compete while they can
in their respective sports. These risks,
combined with the relatively short Figure 10.8 Many dedicated professional dancers study dance
career spans and market forces, are throughout their childhood and professional careers, investing their
used to justify astronomical salaries money and time in their training, but are unable to secure year-round
such as that contracted by Venezuelan paid dance employment.
Physical Education and Sport in the 20th and Early 21st Centuries 159
baseball player Ronald Acuna. He signed an eight-year/$100,000,000 contract in 2019 with the
Atlanta Braves. Salaries for professional athletes have risen steadily over the past century due to
a number of factors, including things like changes to labor practices and commercial influences.
Along with racial integration of professional sports, the changes in sports management have
been among the most dramatic paradigm shifts in the sports history of the 20th and early 21st
centuries.
Figure 10.9 Deion Sanders, the only individual to have played in both a Super Bowl and a World Series.
The ability of players to negotiate their own contracts and play on the teams of their choosing
(known as free agency) was a hard-fought right. In baseball, basketball, football, and hockey,
the team owners used to hold reserve clauses over players when their contracts were up. Players
could be traded, sold, released, or reassigned without control over their careers. Rules have
changed so that, with some restrictions, players are able to become free agents after a certain
point in their contracts. In 2019, only Major League Soccer (MLS) still holds reserve clauses
over players.
Over the years, contract disputes between players and owners have led to work stoppages.
A National Football League (NFL) strike in 1987 caused a shortened season. In 1994, baseball
players on their eighth walkout in Major League Baseball (MLB) history effectively ended
the season that year. The resulting strike was embarrassment for MLB, financial losses for
broadcasters, and fan dismay. The National Hockey League lost an entire season, 2004–2005, to
labor disputes. Professional athletes have had to fight for their employment rights, but they have
been very successful in advocating for themselves.
The situation for female professional athletes has improved over the past 100 years, but the
rewards are far less lucrative. Women in professional sports have struggled to earn comparable
salaries and infrastructure support, and opportunities in coaching and related professions
“Last year, my salary was below poverty level when I looked it up,” Roccaro said. “In
terms of facilities, we don’t even have a locker room at our practice field and I do my
own laundry. I have one pair of cleats that I’m trying to use during the offseason and
make it through until I can get another pair, as opposed to college where you get five
pairs at a time.” (Withiam, 2017, para. 18)
In 2019, the US Women’s Soccer Team sued US Soccer for gender discrimination, and it is not
the first lawsuit to have been filed by women against US Soccer and FIFA, the governing body of
worldwide soccer (Das, 2019). To be sure, women in professional sports have come a long way
since the days of Babe Didrikson Zaharias, but there is much room for improvement in terms of
equality of pay.
Physical Education and Sport in the 20th and Early 21st Centuries 161
Act (2002)? You may know it by its prior designation, Title IX of the Education Amendments of
1972. It is part of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and it covers discrimination in a wide variety of
areas beyond sport, although that is the most widely known aspect of the law. The law applies to
K–12 as well as postsecondary education.
Here is the law: “No person in the United States shall, on the basis of sex, be excluded from
participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any education
program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance.” Whether public or private, unless an
institution receives a waiver (usually for religious reasons), acceptance of federal money means
the school must remain in compliance with the law.
For athletics, three aspects of Title IX are critical:
1. Participation: equal opportunities for male and female participation in sports. The sports do
not need to be identical, but the number of spots available needs to be equal
2. Scholarship money: where scholarships are granted, males and females must be granted
proportional dollars according to their participation
3. Amenities, also known as the 13 program areas: facilities, medical services, scheduling of
games and practices, coaching, publicity, recruitment, tutoring, and room and board are
among the benefits that must be equitable between male and female athletes. Equitable does
not mean equal, but implies a fair and just availability of benefits. These are listed in section
106.37 of the regulations.
Since the law was passed in 1972 and the athletic implications went into effect in 1975,
women’s participation in intercollegiate athletics rose over 700% overall, though participation
rates vary across the United States by region, socioeconomic status, and ethnicity (Schultz, 2018).
In order to ensure compliance, a three-prong test is used as a tool to measure equitable
participation opportunities under Title IX. A school must only meet one of the prongs in order
to qualify for funding.
1. Participation opportunities for male and female students are provided in substantially
proportionate numbers, based on respective enrollments. For example, if 51% of the student
body is female, then females would have to be provided roughly 51% of participation
opportunities for intercollegiate athletics.
2. Demonstration of a history and ongoing practice of program expansion responsive to the
changing interests and abilities the underrepresented sex.
3. Demonstration that the current athletic program fully and effectively accommodates the
interests and abilities of the underrepresented sex.
The underrepresented sex is not necessarily always female, but that has often been the case.
Most schools use the first prong because it is the easiest to quantify. The methods and legitimacy
of determining proportionality have been challenged, however.
There is no requirement for male sports to be cut in order to accommodate women’s sports; in
fact, that practice is considered by the Office for Civil Rights to be a “disfavored practice” (Schultz,
2018, p. 36). However, there have been cases in which that has happened, without violating Title IX
(Carpenter and Acosta, 2005). Legal challenges have been brought by wrestlers and advocates for
other men’s sports in which the validity of the three-part test has been questioned. The National
Wrestling Coaches Association, along with athletes and alumni from Bucknell, Marquette, and
Yale universities, sued the Department of Education in 2003. In another case, a suit was brought
Physical Education and Sport in the 20th and Early 21st Centuries 163
The National Association for Girls and Women in Sport (NAGWS) began in 1899 as a
committee focused on developing rules and guidelines for sports for female participation. As
one of the associations under the umbrella of AAHPERD, NAGWS became a powerful voice
for the importance of women in sport, providing awards, promoting leadership through sport,
and working with Congress to establish a National Girls and Women in Sport Day in 1987. The
day marks the struggles women have had, and continue to have, in sports. It also celebrates the
achievements and progress made thus far. Celebrated annually on the Wednesday of the first
full week of February, it is a time to reflect on the past and a time to envision the future (Wade,
2004). When AAHPERD was changed into SHAPE America in 2014, NAGWS was effectively
eliminated as an organization.
of wheelchair sports” (Horvat, Croce, Pesce, & Fallaize, 2019, p. 476). Begun in 1960, the
Paralympics are specifically for elite athletes with disabilities. Such athletes sometimes compete
in the Olympics as well. This has led to some controversy. For example, when Oscar Pistorius
competed in the London 2012 Olympics running the 400-meter and 400-meter relay races on
carbon-fiber Flex-Foot Cheetah blade prostheses, the question arose as to whether his adaptation
gave him an unfair advantage. No definitive conclusion has yet been reached (Greenemeier,
2016). Adaptive accommodations for competitors with mobility impairments have been added
to events such as the TCS New York City Marathon (sponsored by Tata Consulting Services), the
Boston Marathon, and even the X Games (Sagert, 2009).
Athletes who compete in the Paralympics do not compete in the Special Olympics, which
were founded by Eunice Kennedy Shriver in 1968 specifically to provide people with intellectual
disabilities opportunities to compete in athletics in a supportive atmosphere. However, certain
disabilities have their own international competitions. The Wayfinder Paralympic Games used
to be known as the Junior Blind Olympics when they began in 2005. Athletes in those games
are restricted to ages six to 22 and may be blind, visually impaired, or multi-disabled. The
International Games for the Deaf (sometimes called the International Silent Games) are now
called the Deaflympics. Competitors in the Deaflympics must have at least 55dB of hearing loss
in their better ear, and may not use hearing aids or cochlear implants.
Other sport organizations for people with disabilities include Adaptive Sports USA, Disabled
Sports USA, the National Wheelchair Basketball Association, the United States Association
for Blind Athletes, BlazeSports America, Inc., National Sports Center for the Disabled, Dwarf
Athletic Association of America, and International Federation for Athletes with Intellectual
Impairments (Horvat et al., 2019).
Physical Education and Sport in the 20th and Early 21st Centuries 165
Figure 10.13 A Special Olympics athlete receives a balloon and welcome from Kadena Air Base Special Olympics
volunteers in Okinawa, Japan (2016).
The Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA) (PL 101-336) prohibits private sector
businesses and agencies that do not receive financial assistance from the government from
discriminating against individuals with disabilities. Prior to the ADA, the Rehabilitation Act
of 1973 had only applied to institutions and agencies receiving federal money. Pursuant to the
ADA, recreational facilities must be accessible to people with disabilities. For example, swimming
pools open to the public must include lifts, and bowling alleys need to have bowling ramps so
that bowlers may roll the ball into the lane while seated if needed (Horvat et al., 2019).
SUMMARY
Below is a summary of main points from the chapter. Take a moment to review the Guiding
Questions. Then, read this summary to see how the content in the chapter responds to those
questions.
LEARNING ACTIVITIES
The following are suggestions for assignments and activities related to this chapter. Students
may do one or more to deepen their understanding of the history and philosophy of the time
period covered in this chapter, or develop similar group or individual projects using the text and
resources provided or other research.
2. College Sports and the Sanity Code of 1946 (Research): Research the Sanity Code
proposed to the NCAA membership in 1946. What was it? What effect did it have? What was
its nickname? Why was it repealed? What have been major subsequent rules concerning
regulation of student athlete scholarships and payments?
3. Traditional Square Dance (Kinesthetic): American GIs returning home from World War II
had had square dances on bases all over the globe. Many started clubs and popularized the
traditional squares or invented new patterns at various levels of difficulty in Modern Square
Dance Clubs. After seeking permission from the organizers, attend a beginner square
dance to try a tip (a set of two dances, often done to calls of contrasting styles), or invite a
caller to teach your class some traditional square dances.
4. Special Olympics Experience (Outreach): Does your school have a Special Olympics
club? If so, attend a practice session or better yet, go to a competition. Consider gathering
classmates to participate in an event to raise money for Special Olympics, such as a Polar
Plunge, if one happens nearby. The motto for Special Olympics is “Let me win, but if I can’t
win, let me be brave in the attempt”—can you see that in action? Here is a list of programs:
https://www.specialolympics.org/programs
Physical Education and Sport in the 20th and Early 21st Centuries 167
FIGURE CREDITS
Fig. 10.1: Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:The_posture_of_school_children,_
with_its_home_hygiene_and_new_efficiency_methods_for_school_training_(1913)_
(14592018098).jpg.
Fig. 10.2: Copyright © 2006 by Dierdre, (CC BY-SA 3.0) at https://commons.wikimedia.org/
wiki/File:Western_Square_Dance_Group.jpg.
Fig. 10.3: Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:USMC-13883.jpg.
Fig. 10.4: Source: https://pixabay.com/photos/fisherman-man-fishing-water-sport-1439699/.
Fig. 10.5: Source: https://pixabay.com/photos/swimmer-floats-river-summer-sun-251031/.
Fig. 10.6: Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Photograph_of_Jim_Thorpe_-_
NARA_-_595347.jpg.
Fig. 10.7: Copyright © 2012 by Yann Caradec, (CC BY-SA 2.0) at https://commons.wikimedia.
org/wiki/File:Venus_Williams_(7305501948).jpg.
Fig. 10.8: Copyright © 2016 by Dancermorgan, (CC BY-SA 4.0) at https://commons.wikimedia.
org/wiki/File:Modern_dancer_1.jpg.
Fig. 10.9: Copyright © 1993 by Jim Accordino, (CC BY 2.0) at https://commons.wikimedia.org/
wiki/File:Deion_Sanders_Braves_1993.jpg.
Fig. 10.10: Copyright © 2012 by Joel Solomon, (CC BY 2.0) at https://commons.wikimedia.org/
wiki/File:Women%27s_Soccer_-_USA_vs_Japan_(6).jpg.
Fig. 10.11: Copyright © 2017 by Mehdi Marizad/Fars News Agency, (CC BY 4.0) at https://
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Nasrin_Dousti_2017b.jpg.
Fig. 10.12: Source: https://pixabay.com/photos/action-adult-paralympics-prosthetic-1867014/.
Fig. 10.13: Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Kadena_Special_Olympics_
opening_ceremony_welcomes_athletes_161105-F-YW474-118.jpg.
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Physical Education and Sport in the 20th and Early 21st Centuries 171
C H APTER 11
INTERNATIONAL SPORT AND DANCE IN THE 21ST CENTURY
Figure 11.1 The Olympic Rings are the symbol of the Olympic Games. They represent (left to right) the continents of Europe,
Asia, Africa, Oceania (including Australia), and the Americas (considered as one continent). The logo was designed by the
founder of the modern Olympic Games, Baron Pierre de Coubertin, in 1913. They were first used for the 1920 Summer Olympics
in Antwerp, Belgium.
In several ways, the promotion of healthy living through sport is an ongoing concern of the
IOC. They have a healthy body image program to combat eating disorders and help females
avoid the female athlete triad of low energy, amenorrhea, and osteoporosis that can occur when
high activity levels and insufficient caloric intake are combined. This aspect of the IOC works
to fight body dysmorphic disorder (BDD), a condition in which a person obsesses about a real
or perceived body flaw. A program to combat homophobia and harassment is in place. An IOC
certification course to combat doping and encourage clean athletes has been created, as have
diploma courses in sports medicine, sports nutrition, and sports physical therapies.
The IOC works with world governments, the International Council of Sports Science and
Physical Education (ICSSPE), the International Council for Health, Physical Education,
Recreation, Sport, and Dance (ICHPER-SD), International Sports Federations, National
Olympic Committees, and many associations worldwide (“Recognized Organizations,” 2019) to
respond to international issues in sports, lifelong physical activity, and physical education. Their
• girls and women to be better represented as athletes, “coaches, officials, and decision-
makers” (para. 5),
• a provision for anti-doping efforts and commitment to ethical behavior (para. 7),
• recognition of the importance of media in improving awareness of the socioeconomic
benefits of sport and physical education (para. 14), and
• the need for sufficient funding and human resources to support the efforts of MINEPS
(para. 10).
In the document, they endorsed the Berlin Agenda for Action for Government Ministers (1999)
that had been created at the ICSSPE World Summit on Physical Education, which called for all
schools to include physical education with well-qualified instructors. Recognizing the potential
benefits of sport and physical education toward achieving “social cohesion and democracy”
(para. 13) toward a “Culture of Peace,” (para. 15), the authors of the Punta del Este declaration
also noted that financing physical activity could save medical costs and aid socioeconomic
development (para. 4, 9).
International meetings and policy resolutions concerning physical education were watched
closely by the World Health Organization (WHO). In cooperation with ICCSPE (which has
associate status with UNESCO), WHO has released reports such as An Up-date on the Status
of Physical Education in Schools Worldwide: Technical Report for the World Health Organization
(Hardman, n.d.) and Global Action Plan on Physical Education 2018–2030: More Active People
for a Healthier World (2018). UNESCO has published World-Wide Survey of School Physical
Education (Hardman, Murphy, Routen, & Tones, 2014) and a host of survey reports, regional
studies, directories, and proceedings of conferences. The conclusions reached in these types of
documents indicate a number of ongoing issues.
1. Policies and implementation are often far different: legal provisions for physical education
are often unmet in actual practice.
2. The legal and perceived status of physical education instructors and classes are lower than
those of other subject areas.
3. While quality physical education is receiving more acceptance worldwide, competitive
sports and track and field activities are used most often, resulting in increasing numbers of
students rejecting those activities; this leads to inactivity and obesity.
4. Insufficient numbers and quality in physical education teacher training programs,
combined with gaps in oversight, diminish the overall level of quality physical education
worldwide.
5. The availability of facilities and the maintenance of facilities for physical education and
sports varies significantly.
6. Barriers to inclusion based on gender and disability continue to impede efforts toward
quality physical education for all.
7. Partnerships between schools and communities to provide pathways to lifelong physical
activity are not always in place, often due to economic pressures.
It should be noted that improvements have been made in some of these areas, but they still
rate concern from the international physical education community.
This philosophy appears in Cheska (1987), in reference to the dance heritage of West
Africa:
“Traditional” pertains to tradition or that which is handed down from the past and still utilized
in the present. It often connotes such meanings as authority, truth, pristine, or unchanged;
however, the tenure and tenor of the past is never static, for the past has been as subject to
change as the present. Tradition is not a passive state, but a dynamic process. (p. 67)
In her classification system of dance in West Africa, Cheska uses three main categories.
Classical ceremonial ritual dance, popular dance, and created dance. All three categories may
• acrobatic dance,
• agrarian (planting and harvesting) dance,
• animal (imitative) dance,
• ecstatic (mystic communication with deities) dance,
• life-cycle (initiations, courtship, funeral) dance,
• and social relations dance (friendship, courtship, and fertility) as being traditional. (Cheska,
1987, pp. 67–69)
Many ceremonial dance traditions may be used in created dance, although usually they are
altered when they are performed. For example, on a large Western-style proscenium stage,
presentation for the audience requires the performers to face the audience for much of the dance,
whereas in its original setting, a dance might be performed within a circle of onlookers,
musicians, or other dancers.
Figure 11.6 Masai dancers of Kenya: the traditional adumu jumping dance. Dancers compete to see who can
jump the highest, and the winner earns respect and admiration.
In the Western world, the classical tradition of ballet developed as a dance form meant
to be seen from one side of the stage. Its history is hundreds of years old, and it is a prime
example of Western theatrical art. However, there are dance instructors from that tradition
who maintain that its technique is the best means in the world for developing dancers and that
even those who are trained in other dance forms should study ballet in order to improve their
dance abilities.
SUMMARY
Below is a summary of main points from the chapter. Take a moment to review the Guiding
Questions. Then, read this summary to see how the content in the chapter responds to those
questions.
• When studying international sports, students should recognize their own positionalities and
the ways in which their background might bias their ability to comprehend the customs,
games, dances, and sports of other cultures.
LEARNING ACTIVITIES
The following are suggestions for assignments and activities related to this chapter. Students
may do one or more to deepen their understanding of the history and philosophy of the time
period covered in this chapter, or develop similar group or individual projects using the text and
resources provided or other research.
1. Concept Mapping (Visual): The connections and overlaps between the activities and
programs of different international sports and physical education organizations can be
confusing. Using Internet searches of organizations and concept mapping, diagram the
relationships between the following organizations in terms of their priorities and activities:
the International Olympic Committee (IOC), the International Council of Sports Science and
Physical Education (ICSSPE), and the International Council for Health, Physical Education,
Recreation, Sport, and Dance (ICHPER-SD). For an explanation of concept mapping, see
the University of Waterloo’s Centre for Teaching Excellence at https://uwaterloo.ca/centre-
for-teaching-excellence/teaching-resources/teaching-tips/educational-technologies/all/
concept-mapping-tools.
2. Non-Western Sports and Games (Research): Research and write a paper on a non-
Western sport or game. Watch a video of the activity because it is likely to be unfamiliar
to you. Describe the basic rules of the sport or game, its history, and any religious and/
or cultural significance. Some examples are sepak takraw, bo-taoshi, sumo wrestling,
buzkashi, kabbadi, and tahtib.
4. Global Dance Practitioners (Outreach): Does your community have an African dance
ensemble? Taiko drummers (not strictly dance, but very physical rhythmic movement)?
Non-Western classical dance specialists? Folk or ethnic dancers? Visit a practice session
(arrange permission beforehand) and/or attend a performance. If possible, meet the
performers and instructor(s). Ask about the training and traditions involved: how many
years have they studied? Who taught them? Why did they first start doing what they do?
In some cases, you may be invited to try a dance or a few movements. If so, don’t be shy!
This is a wonderful opportunity for an unforgettable cross-cultural experience, and you will
better understand the dance even if it is unfamiliar or difficult for you.
FIGURE CREDITS
Fig. 11.1: Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:640p-Olympic_Rings_depicting_
the_five_continents.png.
Fig. 11.2: Copyright © 2010 by Gwolbach, (CC BY-SA 3.0) at https://commons.wikimedia.org/
wiki/File:Matt_Curve-6.JPG.
Fig. 11.3: Copyright © 2008 by Tom Hammer, (CC BY 2.0) at https://commons.wikimedia.org/
wiki/File:Lipizzaner_Stallion.jpg.
Fig. 11.4: Copyright © 2016 by Thomas Quine, (CC BY 2.0) at https://commons.wikimedia.org/
wiki/File:Pleading_(24587664927).jpg.
Fig. 11.5: Copyright © 2011 by Kazuyoshi Yura, (CC BY-SA 3.0) at https://commons.wikimedia.
org/wiki/File:Ryouou_in_Bugaku_(Hokkaido_Gokoku-Jinja)_3.jpg.
Fig. 11.6: Copyright © 2011 by David Racher. Reprinted with permission.
Fig. 11.7: Copyright © 2017 by Nmvs, (CC BY-SA 4.0) at https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/
File:Kuchipudi_1.jpg
REFERENCES
Beauchamp, Z. (2017, October 12). Here’s what UNESCO is—and why the Trump administration
just quit it. Vox. Retrieved from https://www.vox.com/world/2017/10/12/16464778/
unesco-us-withdrawal-trump
Epistemology: the study of how people know and learn • How are philosophies applied in physical
things
education and sport?
Idealism: a philosophical position in which reality consists of
things that can be experienced through the intellect rather
than through the body and its senses
METAPHYSICS
At a fundamental level, we start with the question of the nature of reality and our ability to
perceive it and act within it. The ancient Greek philosopher Plato (427–347 BCE) proposed the
notion of idealism, a form of substance mind/body dualism in which reality exists, but humans
cannot truly grasp it because of the limitations of the physical body’s sensory organs, which
are likely fallible and subject to deception. True understanding is only possible through the
intellect (Plato, 360 BCE/1988; Thomas, 1983). Kinesiologists who believe that there are truly
perfect ways to execute movements or plays in sport, or who adhere to an ideal conception of
any given physical activity in their teaching or performance of movements, may be said to be
aligned with the philosophy of idealism. This is not always best for humans, who are notoriously
imperfect beings. For example, the ideal turned-out first position in classical ballet has heels
together and feet in a perfect 180 degree line. However, due to the human anatomy, very few
people can achieve that position and be able to perform dance technique skills such as pliés
(knee bends) correctly.
EPISTEMOLOGY
NATURALISM
If we acknowledge that our understanding of physical activity depends upon our interaction
with the environment and the sum of our experiences, we must inquire what types of experiences
we should have if we are to achieve a state of physical education. For Jean-Jacques Rousseau
(1712–1778 CE), who drew heavily upon Aristotle’s precepts, the education of the physical body
was an essential part of upbringing for both boys and girls. Using the principles of naturalism,
he recommended different types of physical experiences for different sexes, but recognized that
the experience of nature in activity was preferable to life without such experiences (Rousseau,
1762/1921). Physical educational naturalism has two strains: interaction with and experience of
nature during physical activity, and student-centered educational progress based on the natural
physical, cognitive, and emotional development of students, which can vary between individuals.
In his treatise on education entitled Émile, Rousseau also details the need for children to be
exposed to different types of education using what we now think of as developmental principles,
such that their education naturally followed their physical and mental development. Since the
first experience children have is the interaction between their bodies and their environments,
Figure 12.2 Physical challenges are fun for children in outdoor playgrounds. Overcoming obstacles increases
their physical abilities and helps build confidence, while fresh air and sunlight also provide healthy benefits.
PRAGMATISM
For a coach who believes in pragmatism as an educational philosophy, or perhaps more correctly
an educational method, a female could certainly try out for a high school team, and if the results
of the tryout were promising, a spot on the team would be the logical result. Peirce (1903),
James (1907), Dewey (1916), and Lewis (1930) were among the early-20th-century educational
philosophers to whom the term has been applied. Dewey’s (1859–1952) influence on education
in the United States was particularly widespread, with his belief that engrossing play and hands-
on educational experiences prepared students to become productive members of society, able to
work independently and in groups (Dewey, 1916).
Related philosophies of experimentalism and instrumentalism contributed to the theory of
pragmatism, refining and defining its aims and limitations. Experimentalists believe in education
as a lifelong learning process of experience (a posteriori), rather than the acceptance of an a priori
(prior and predetermined) set of facts to be learned or ideals to be grasped. Instrumentalists
are concerned with the ends to be achieved by experimentation and learning: do we try out
different ways to throw a ball for the sake of knowing how to do so, for example, or because
that skill is essential to playing games involving balls? Dewey’s experimentalist pragmatism was
sometimes called instrumentalism, though that term had started to fall out of favor by the early
1930s (Childs, 1931). “Method,” Dewey wrote (as cited in Archambault), “in any case is but
an effective way of employing some material for some end” (1964, p. 389). In other words, we
learn technique in order to be able to do something. As a philosophy, the word instrumentalism
carried two connotations: one was that the brain is the instrument of learning, and the second
was that learning was useful only when practical, or pragmatic, life goals were achieved.
Grounding educational philosophy in real-world applications offered an attractive option to the
more esoteric studies of philosophy for its own sake, especially during the Great Depression, an era
of economic stress. The notion that learners are striving toward a greater purpose has not always
been encouraged in physical education, though. Germany banned German gymnastics in the early
19th century when it became obvious that overt nationalism was driving physical culture to such
a degree that it became a threat to the country. Still, both the Danish and Swedish gymnastics
systems openly espoused nationalistic goals. In Great Britain, sports were played with the goal of
developing moral values and leadership skills, and in the United States, Dewey (1940) believed all
education must serve as a bulwark against European fascism, and Zeigler (1968) has argued for the
role of physical educators in opposition to totalitarianism and excessive nationalism.
In the United States, where pragmatism is sometimes called ethical naturalism or
progressivism, the physical education community appreciates the problem-solving experiential
aspect of learning that is at the heart of this philosophy. Whether encouraging children to find
their own solutions to problems encountered in youth sport (Meredith, 2016) or acknowledging
the carryover of team problem-solving skills to the workplace, Americans appreciate a willingness
to try things out individually or in teams to find the best solutions (Zeigler, 1973) rather than
always depending on a metaphysical ideal to guide them.
EXISTENTIALISM
In the decades following World War II, philosophers looked backward to the writings of
19th-century thinkers Søren Kierkegaard and Friedrich Nietzsche for ideas about how
individuals exist in an age of potential nuclear annihilation. Kierkegaard (1813–1855) was
PHENOMENOLOGY
As kinesiologists search for understanding of the essence of sport and physical activity, we
recognize that subjective experience is as important as objective, descriptive analysis. Edmund
Figure 12.5 Sportscasters practice a form of phenomenology when they describe the actions of athletes as they are happening.
LEARNING ACTIVITIES
The following are suggestions for assignments and activities related to this chapter. Students
may do one or more to deepen their understanding of the philosophical concepts covered in this
chapter, or develop similar group or individual projects using the text and resources provided or
other research.
1. Mental Mapping (Visual): Figure 12.1 provides a visual representation showing a basic
difference between the metaphysics of Plato and Aristotle, and Figure 12.4 is an illustration
of a basic idea of existentialism. Create diagrams or images for the concepts of naturalism
and pragmatism and philosophers associated with those ideas. You may also diagram the
different philosophers and their main ideas to help differentiate them in your mind.
2. Difference Between Play and Sport (Research): When does a game stop being a game
and become a sport? Are all sports competitive games? Is the difference in the intention of
the athlete, or in the eyes of the spectators? Research the nature of sport and the nature
of play to find out where they intersect and diverge.
REFERENCES
Archambault, R. D. (Ed.) (1964). John Dewey on education. New York, NY: Modern Library.
Brown, L. L. (2018). Comparing preschool philosophies: Montessori, Waldorf and more.
Retrieved from http://www.pbs.org/parents/education/going-to-school/choosing/comparing-
preschool-philosophies-montessori-waldorf-and-more/
Childs, J. L. (1931). Education and the philosophy of experimentalism. New York, NY: D.
Appleton-Century.
Descartes, R. (1641/1901/2001). Meditations on first philosophy (J. Veitch, Trans.). Retrieved
from http://www.classicallibrary.org/descartes/meditations/
Dewey, J. (1916). Democracy and education. Retrieved from http://www.gutenberg.org/
ebooks/852?msg=welcome_stranger
Dewey, J. (1940). Education today. New York, NY: G. P. Putnam’s Sons.
Hetherington, C. W. (1922). School program in physical education. Retrieved from https://archive.
org/details/cu31924014464543/page/n3
Hopsicker, P. M., & Hostetler, D. (2016). The future of sport philosophy in higher education
kinesiology. Quest, 68(3), 240–256. Retrieved from http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00336297.201
6.1181556
James, W. (1907). Pragmatism (a new name for some old ways of thinking). Retrieved from http://
www.authorama.com/pragmatism-1.html
Kierkegaard, S. (1971). Either/or (D. Swenson & L. M. Swenson, Trans.). Princeton, NJ: Princeton
University Press.
Lewis, C. I. (1930). Pragmatism and current thought. Journal of Philosophy, 27(9), 238–246.
Lumpkin, A. (2017). Introduction to physical education, exercise science, & sport (10th ed.). New
York, NY: McGraw-Hill Education.
McCloy, C. H. (1936). How about some muscle? Journal of Health & Physical Education, 7(5),
302–303, 355.
Meredith, J. (2016, February 15). Teach your child to solve youth sports problems by
himself [Web log post]. Retrieved from https://blogs.usafootball.com/blog/1134/
teach-your-child-to-solve-youth-sports-problems-by-himself
Mihalich, J. C. (1988). Existentialism and the athlete. In P. J. Galasso (Ed.), Philosophy of sport
and physical activity: Issues and concepts (pp. 100–113). Toronto, Canada: Canadian Scholars’
Press.
As we grow up, the notion of fairness and justice becomes even more important with
participation in physical education classes and competitive sports (individual or group). While
we depend on our teachers and coaches to teach and enforce the rules of sports, we sometimes
see parents or participants acting in ways that seem wrong or harmful. We may even get advice
from coaches or parents to cheat a little if it helps us to win a sporting event! It can be confusing,
and we begin to wonder how anyone can really know what is good and bad. Who gets to decide?
How are decisions made? How can we know if they are truly good?
Rather than the usual learning activities, this chapter provides discussion questions at the end to
provide opportunities for interactive learning to deepen understanding of the concepts presented.
AXIOLOGY
Axiology is the study of value. As a branch of philosophy, it encompasses ethics and aesthetics (the
study of beauty, which is the topic of the next chapter). Both ethics and aesthetics involve studies
in judgment of situations and objects. Sometimes they overlap. For example, a judge at a figure
skating competition may be expected to judge fairly and with an expert eye for the graceful athletic
performance of the skaters and to render a score (evaluation). We will first consider historical
approaches to ethics before considering ethical dilemmas and professional ethics.
NON-EUROPEAN ETHICS
A worldwide overview of ethical philosophy is beyond the scope of this textbook. Still, a
brief (if oversimplified) glimpse into some non-Western viewpoints will contribute to a more
comprehensive idea of ethical understanding.
In the Middle East, due to trade and travel, the philosophies of Socrates, Plato, Aristotle,
and Zeno influenced Islamic ethics. However, some philosophers (Al-Farabi and Ibn Sina)
believed that intelligence and wisdom led to happiness, whereas Al-Ghazali said that the greatest
happiness was only open to mystics (those who have direct experience of the divine). Ibn Rushd
contended that either knowledge or religion could be equal paths to happiness (Leaman, 2001;
Christopoulos, 2010).
It is in the writings of Ahmad Ibn Miskawayh (c. 932–1030 CE) that we see the sense of duty
to one’s superiors, to the divine, and to one’s ancestors as a guiding principle. If a soccer player
Figure 13.3 The Taoist (Daoist) symbol of yin (dark swirl) and yang (light swirl) symbolizes
interconnectedness, balance, interdependence, and interrelationship in nature and life.
Notice that each swirl contains a circle of its opposite: nothing is absolute.
From the fourth century BCE onward, Buddhism was influential in India, China, and Korea
(Finn, 1988). In Buddhism, karma, or good works in thought, speech, and conduct, are valued
(Kim, 2001). While violence is contrary to Buddhist compassion, martial gods inspire warrior
monks such as those of the Shaolin Monastery in China (Shahar, 2008). Since the 1300s, Korean
culture displayed strong influences of Confucianism, stressing four essential virtues: humaneness,
righteousness, propriety, and wisdom (Kim, 2001, p. 187). Since the 1700s, Christianity has
brought a more individualistic, theocentric ethical approach to some Korean people.
Figure 13.4 Good sportsmanship is ethical: as Gyekye would advise, all competitors must be
treated with respect.
How can we know what is good (or best) to do when facing an ethical question? Moral reasoning
is the use of critical, logical analysis to determine right and wrong in a situation. In the study of
European philosophy, we often turn to the philosophies of Immanuel Kant and John Stuart Mill
for guidance.
Moving from the ideals of character, morality, and virtue to duties and practical ethics, in
Kant’s Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals (Kant, 1785/1998), the duties to perfect oneself
and to contribute to the goals of others are obligations we owe to ourselves and to humanity. We
owe it to ourselves to perfect our athletic abilities, if that is what we want to achieve. We owe it
to others not to use them solely as a means to our ends (Gressis, 2013).
Beyond those duties, Kant postulates
the categorical imperative, an absolute
moral necessity. The categorical imperative
exists beyond any potential benefit or
harm to anyone involved in a decision and
is the cornerstone of deontological moral
reasoning. For example, if intentionally
harming others is always morally wrong,
then a pitcher who aims a baseball pitch
at a batter is deontologically in the wrong
because it is always wrong to intentionally
harm someone.
Kant’s ethical philosophy is sometimes
called non-consequential because the
consequences of an action are of less
importance than the inherent good or
bad quality of an action.
In the literature of physical education,
a strong case for the implementation of
non-consequential ethics comes from
Elizabeth Halsey, a mid-20th-century
philosopher of physical education. In her
book Inquiry and Invention in Physical
Education, she wrote that “Mutual
understanding, mutual acceptance of
difference, the Ethical Imperative as
stated by Kant, and even certain difficult
religious teachings must be carried
beyond lip service into action if reliable
peace is to be secured. Physical education
is a fruitful laboratory for putting such
teachings into action” (1964, p. 100). Figure 13.5 What do we owe to each other? Moral reasoning is a form of critical
analysis using logic to make ethical decisions.
In your career, you will be expected to belong to one or more professional societies, and those
societies usually publish codes of ethics that can help to remind you of your obligations (that
is, ethical duties) to your profession, other professionals, and people with whom you work. A
happy, flourishing career depends on many things, and prudent judgment in ethical matters
is an important part of your success. The codes are often helpful guides, but while some
points may seem blatantly obvious, others will probably seem novel or possibly confusing
to you.
On one hand, you may find contradictions or inconsistencies within and between various
codes. They are written by humans, after all, and they are periodically revised. On the other
hand, the punishments for violating these codes can vary widely, from no punishment at all to
professional dishonor, career-ending sanctions, and even legal repercussions.
Since ethical violations can be serious, it is worth studying and adhering to the code(s) of
whatever profession you enter. Here are some professional organizations that provide online
codes of conduct. Look up one or more to see what will be expected of YOU in your future career
using this list or your own search.
You can also visit the home pages of organizations such as the American Athletic
Trainers’ Association or state chapters of professional groups to find codes of conduct or codes
of ethics.
For researchers who study human subjects, The Belmont Report (by the National Commission
for the Protection of Human Subjects of Biomedical and Behavioral Research) is a foundational
document. You can find it at https://www.hhs.gov/ohrp/regulations-and-policy/belmont-report/
index.html.
IMPLICATIONS OF ETHICS
Life presents us with ethical decisions every day; many are so minor that we barely notice we are
making them. Studying ethics helps to prepare us for the larger issues that confront players and
people in positions of responsibility or authority. Knowing what is good and right is often
difficult or clouded by self-interest or competing points of view.
Figure 13.6 Being a competent professional implies in part that you understand and accept your
ethical responsibilities.
SUMMARY
Below is a summary of main points from the chapter. Take a moment to review the Guiding
Questions. Then, read this summary to see how the content in the chapter responds to those
questions.
• Ethics is the study of morality and the principles that guide human behavior, and axiology
is the study of value (which can include elements of both ethics and aesthetics, the topic of
the next chapter).
• Plato, Aristotle, Zeno, Ahmad Ibn Miskawayh, Mo Tzŭ, Confucius, Zhuangzi, Kwame
Gyekye, Immanuel Kant, and John Stuart Mill are some of the prominent European and
non-European philosophers whose works on ethical questions are used as a basis for
understanding this branch of philosophy.
• An understanding of ethics will be important to your professional career as a guide to your
obligations (that is, ethical duties) to your profession, to other professionals, and to the
people with whom you will work.
LEARNING ACTIVITIES
Discussion: The following are situations calling for ethical decisions. As we have seen,
differences of opinion may arise in discussions of ethics, so there may be different conclusions
reached by different people. Using respectful academic dialogue (no personal attacks and you
must respect the opinions of others even when disagreeing), choose one or more for discussion
as a class or in small groups. You may wish to refer to the websites above for help.
1. You have signed on as a volunteer coach for a youth cross-country running program. You
studied first aid years ago but have not recertified because the running program does not
require current skills certification. Should the program require that coaches be certified at
their own expense? Who might be harmed if you don’t know first aid skills and a runner is
injured at practices or at a meet?
3. You are working as a chiropractor in a rural town and business has been slow. A nearby
medical group has offered to give you a small sum of money for referring patients to them
for treatment beyond the scope of your practice. You consider accepting their offer because
without it, you might have to close your practice and the town would be left without any
chiropractic services. Is it ethical to accept?
4. In your work as a personal trainer at a local fitness center, you have found that many people
benefit from using Supplement X to reach their goals, so you convinced your manager to
sell it at the center, with a deal to give you part of each sale. Having researched the product
thoroughly, you recommend it to your clients, and you tell them that you make a little
money on each sale. Is that ethical business dealing?
5. You have a thriving career in massage therapy. Occasionally, a client will ask you to engage
in massage of a sexual nature. Some of them ask you to go out with them. You are tempted
by one person in particular, with whom you feel a special attraction. What should you do?
6. There is a doctor on television telling viewers about the fantastic benefits of a new weight
loss supplement made of all natural ingredients. There is some scientific evidence that the
supplement might have some benefit, but the research is questionable. You are a physical
educator, and students have been telling you about this new breakthrough and how it
has already helped some people they know. What are your obligations to them and to the
community?
7. A young basketball player has caught the attention of some talent scouts as a result of
his phenomenal play, but he has gotten caught up in his success and his teammates are
not happy about his monopolizing the ball and focusing on his point totals, all with the
encouragement of the coach. Is there an ethical issue at stake here? Are there several
issues?
8. Discuss the similarities and differences between deontological and teleological moral
reasoning. Do you know which philosophers were known for non-consequentialism and
utilitarianism? Can you give examples of each?
REFERENCES
Bambrough, R. (1963). The philosophy of Aristotle. (A. E. Wardman & J. L. Creed, Trans.). New
York, NY: New American Library.
Christopoulos, L. (2010). Early combat sport rituals in China and the rise of professionalism (475
BC to 220 AD). Nikephoros, 23, 19–41, quoted in R. Edelman & W. Wilson, (Eds.) (2017). The
Oxford handbook of sports. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press.
Corcoran, J. & Farkas, E. (1983). Martial arts: Traditions, history, people. New York, NY: Gallery
Books.
Feng, Y. (1952). A history of Chinese philosophy: Vol. I (2nd ed.). (D. Bodde, Trans.) Princeton,
NJ: Princeton University Press.
Finn, M. (1988). Martial arts: A complete illustrated history. Woodstock, NY: Overlook Press.
Friday, K. F. (May, 1994). Bushido or bull? A medieval historian’s perspective on the Imperial
army and the Japanese warrior tradition. History Teacher, 27(3), 339–349.
Gressis, R. (2013). Kantian practical ethics. In H. LaFollette (Ed.), The international encyclopedia
of ethics (pp. 2896–2903). doi:10.1002/ 9781444367072.wbiee618.
Gyekye, K. (2010). African ethics. In The Stanford encyclopedia of philosophy. Retrieved from
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/african-ethics
Halsey, E. (1964). Inquiry and invention in physical education. Philadelphia, PA: Lea & Febiger.
Inazo, N. (1908). Bushido: The soul of Japan. Retrieved from http://www.gutenberg.org/
files/12096/12096-h/12096-h.htm
Kant, I. (1785/1998). Groundwork of the metaphysics of morals. (M. Gregor, Trans). New York,
NY: Cambridge University Press.
Kim, Y.-C. (2001). Ethics in Korean philosophy. In Encyclopedia of Asian philosophy (pp.
186–188). London, England: Routledge.
Leaman, O. (Ed.) (2001). Ethics in Islamic philosophy. In Encyclopedia of Asian philosophy (pp.
184–186). London, England: Routledge.
Leaman, O. (Ed.) (2006). The bibliographical encyclopedia of Islamic philosophy (Vol. 2) (pp.
96–100). London, England: Thoemmes Continuum.
Lear, G. R. (2013). Aristotle. In H. LaFollette (Ed.), The international encyclopedia of ethics (pp.
348–362). doi: 10.1002/9781444367072.wbiee650
Mill, J. S. (1863/1987). Utilitarianism. Buffalo, NY: Prometheus.
Osborne Jr., T. M. (2017). Medieval ethics. In H. LaFollette (Ed.), The international encyclopedia
of ethics. doi: 10.1002/9781444367072.wbiee686
Shahar, M. (2008). The Shaolin monastery: History, religion, and the Chinese martial arts.
Honolulu, HI: University of Hawai’i Press.
Aesthetic perspective: the ability to consider an object or about aesthetics and physical activity?
action using aesthetic analysis
• Can sports have meaning?
Ontology: the study of the nature of being or of the
relationships between concepts
Purposive: sport in which the aesthetic qualities of
performance matter less than the scoring of points,
goals, etc.
Intention: in a sporting context, the degree to which an
athlete attempts to do something in a certain way
Intentional fallacy: the idea that the intention of an athlete is
a means by which s/he can and should be judged
ˉ Greek term for struggle or contest
agon:
Figure 14.2 Polish National Ballet dancer Vladimir Yaroshenko as Petruchio in John Cranko’s The Taming of the Shrew, based on
Shakespeare’s play.
This alone does not quite answer the question. We all form subjective responses to the bodies
of different athletes in different sports, but those responses do not automatically give us an
aesthetic perspective. For example, do you derive a sense of enjoyment from looking at female
bodybuilders? Male power lifters? Gymnasts? Swimmers? MMA fighters? In order to achieve
an aesthetic perspective, you need to acknowledge—but then delve beyond—a simple visceral
response of “I like it,” or “I don’t like it.” Everyone is entitled to opinions, so in order to engage
in meaningful philosophical discussion, we also need to be able to discuss physical phenomena
such as formal elements (symmetry, asymmetry, balance, flow, speed, power, grace, efficiency,
timing, and strength, for example).
SPORT AS ART?
It has been said that sport is applied art
(Friedenberg, 1967), and there are many
philosophers who have pointed out the
similarities between sport and art from
various aesthetic viewpoints (Aldrich, 1937;
Beardsley, 1958; Lowe, 1977; Munro, 1949;
Figure 14.3 It’s okay to look at and appreciate the human body as
something beautiful.
Weiss, 1971). Some see competition as a
Like an artist, the athlete is occupied with producing something with which he can live
for a while, and which, so far, enables him to be self-sufficient. He does not make and
is not interested in making something that is beautiful, or in grasping the very being
of space, time, or energy; instead he holds himself away from everything else to give
himself wholly to a game. (Weiss, 1969, p. 245)
Weiss seems to be linking professional athletes with artists in terms of production of items/
events that allow for some profitability. From this perspective, sports are simply a way to make
a living, and there is no meaning beyond that for professionals. The immediate objectives are
scoring points or achieving the best score in an event, and the overarching objective is the ability
to support oneself financially. The world of college athletics differs in that way from professional
sports. As one Las Vegas betting director put it, “In college, the athletes play for fleeting
moments, but in the pros, if you don’t have the motivation to give your best performance for
your next contract or paycheck, I don’t know where that motivation comes from” (Rood, quoted
in Plaschke, 2012, para. 21).
We can accept that some athletes, like artists, want to make a living. However, that motivation
cannot be said to drive all athletes (or even all artists). After all, children playing on a youth
soccer league are not usually in it for the money. So we can accept that sport activity which is
purpose driven (i.e., undertaken with the aim of making a living) has a link to art, but may not
be artistic in itself. What about Weiss’s other assertion, that athletes do not make or intend to
make anything that is beautiful?
Figure 14.5 Former Minnesota Vikings running back Adrian Peterson in a purposive play of the 2008
Pro Bowl in Hawaii. He was named MVP for that game for his achievements but was later involved in
controversies in his private life. Do spectators view players differently when they know about the
players’ issues off the field? Should they?
Wertz, on the other hand, argues for a creative, playful impulse in athletics which can be
perceived as art, regardless of the intention of the athlete. He is anti-intentionalist in his writings,
asserting a “criterion of independence” (Wertz, 1985, p. 512) that denies that the athlete(s) alone
can determine (or intend) whether or not a movement, play, action, or event can or should be
interpreted or experienced as an aesthetic experience.
In contrast, Fraleigh (1973b) believes that intention is indivisible from sport, and one of
its hallmarks is the ability of an athlete to project his or her intentions during the game. The
role of the athlete’s will in this view has less to do with aesthetics in the sense of beauty, in this
viewpoint, and more to do with the sense of its meaning for the participant.
Do any educators—or physical educators—think that moving children leave their senses,
their feelings, their emotions and their thoughts in the classroom? Do any educational
“authorities” think that the processes of action interfere with the processes of thought,
feeling and emotion? (1975, p. 156)
Or, as the great baseball player, manager, and coach Lawrence Peter “Yogi” Berra said, “How
can you think and hit at the same time?” (Blount, 2014).
Perhaps the right question is not whether sport is art. Perhaps it is better, as Arnold (1979)
suggests, if the percipient is capable of choosing to view any sport as though it were art. This
stance allows us to look beyond the question of beauty into the purposes and meanings of sport
and physical activity, from the perspectives of participant and spectator. This brings us to our
final aesthetic consideration in this chapter. If we treat sport as though it were art, can we ascribe
meaning to it? Does it need to have a purpose?
Figure 14.7 Young fans of the “Bafana Bafana,” or South African national football team. Fans often
paint their faces in team colors to show solidarity and identification with “their” team.
Our families, friends, cities, and countries bond together over sporting contests. The sense
of being part of something greater than oneself gives feelings of satisfaction, regardless of the
outcome of an event. Fans don’t even need to watch or attend actual competitions to be part of
the action, with fantasy leagues and gambling opportunities in abundance.
Professional sporting events have become similar to arena-type musical performances in the
use of video, pyrotechnics, and music. Energy and excitement fill the stands. Concessions vendors
hawk programs, beer, and food. Stadiums have fountains, luxury boxes, kiddie playgrounds,
and swimming pools. Nobody is expected to sit quietly and observe a game continuously from
beginning to end. The experience of a sporting event is a centerpiece, but fans now expect far
more for their money.
SPORT AS DRAMA
It is tempting, given the spectacle and nature of competitions, to compare them to dramas. In
youth sports, parents may come to blows over decisions. In professional sports, the drama can
take place in the bleachers between unruly and/or intoxicated fans, but the bigger performance
is in the contests. Professional wrestling offers an extreme version of dramatic storytelling, with
wrestlers choosing “good guy” or “heel” personas and performing scripted fights in and out of
the ring. Boxers and MMA fighters will often taunt opponents in advance of fights to whip up
spectator interest in matches.
The narrative might follow traditional patterns of dramatic confrontation: wo/man versus
wo/man (singles table tennis), wo/man versus society (marathon racing), or wo/man versus
nature (bullfighting or its less bloody cousin, the course landaise). The armies that meet in battle
in Shakespeare’s Richard III have their counterparts in the NCAA basketball final four; bitter
rivalries fuel the contests, and plot twists and turns abound.
Once the games or matches begin, the opponents drive the narrative, play by play, punch by
punch, mile by mile. An unexpected injury or crash heightens the arousal level of the fans, and
a goal scored releases cheers or groans. We see players at their best or at their worst, performing
superhuman feats or cheating. A close contest can be excruciating and exciting, giving a cathartic
release when the final point is scored. The fans’ feelings of aggression may have been sublimated
by the action in the athletic struggle, or they may express joy over a win by hooliganism, or by
rioting and setting fires. In any case, the sense of engagement with the drama is complete.
Kupfer (1975) refers to the “temporally extended opposition” (p. 88) of competition, which
hones and places the skills and abilities of athletes to the test. Superior athletes, like superior
warriors throughout history, are honored and given medals, rings, and monetary rewards
(sponsorships, contracts, and prize earnings). Only through the struggle of competition, the
Figure 14.8 Lightweight boxer Robson Conceição, the first Brazilian to win Olympic gold in boxing,
accepts the acclaim of the crowd at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro (Brazil) Summer Olympic Games.
SUMMARY
Below is a summary of main points from the chapter. Take a moment to review the Guiding
Questions. Then, read this summary to see how the content in the chapter responds to those
questions.
• Aesthetics is the study of beauty, but within its study we consider relationships of various
aesthetic elements, including meaning and purpose of artistic works and events.
• Kinesiologists study aesthetics to achieve a deeper appreciation of the human body in motion
and a more comprehensive understanding of the ways play, athletics, and sport complement
human experience.
• While sport is not art, some sports have important artistic components, and all sports can
be experienced through an aesthetic point of view.
• Philosophers of aesthetics in sport consider many issues, including intentionality, the nature
of play, sport and competition, and the subjective experience of sport participation and
spectatorship.
• Sports can and do have meaning; however, those meanings can vary between individuals, so
we cannot determine their symbolic nature with any degree of precision.
The following are suggestions for assignments and activities related to this chapter. Students
may do one or more to deepen their understanding of the history and philosophy of the time
period covered in this chapter, or develop similar group or individual projects using the text and
resources provided or other research.
1. Sports Photography (Visual): In Figure 14.5, above, Adrian Peterson is the center of
attention. However, the defender to his left, caught in a horizontal diving position, and
the player beneath him on a different angle, give this photograph a strong contrast to the
upright players. Another player on the left is balanced on one leg, caught in the act of
running. Yet another player, on the right, stands in a squatting defensive pose, balanced
on the fronts of his feet for lateral mobility. The photograph is dynamic, filled with energy
and aesthetic elements. Find other action photographs of purposive sports, and examine
them for aesthetic properties, creating a PowerPoint presentation in which you can present
five photographs while pointing out the formal elements The elements might include the
use of light, shadow, lines, composition (symmetry/asymmetry, for example), and spatial
elements. Include the physical arrangement of body parts that can be viewed as an
aesthetic object in terms of muscularity, pose, balance/off-balance stance of the athlete(s),
evidence of effort, and any other notable characteristics.
2. Aesthetic Distance and Sports Film (Research): One of the most impressive sports films
in cinematic history is Leni Riefenstahl’s Olympia, which documents events of the 1936
Summer Olympics in Berlin, Germany. Her use of editing and techniques of filming this film
were groundbreaking. Watch Part 2 of Olympia, known in German as Fest der Schönheit
(Festival of Beauty), with particular attention to the famous diving sequence. Notice the
naturalism of the opening sequence (warning: some nudity is seen in this part) and the
open-air men’s gymnastics competition (in the tradition of German gymnastics). Consider
the drama of the boating sequence, in which the athletes contend with the forces of wind
and water in their competitive drama. How does she present the struggle of man versus
man in the boxing competition? Research why her work might be considered controversial,
given that it was produced under the auspices of the Third Reich. Is it possible to watch
the film with an aesthetic point of view, recognizing but seeing past its propagandistic
elements? Does it change the way you view the aesthetic elements of sports?
REFERENCES
Aldrich, V. C. (1937). A theory of ball play. Psychological Review, 44, 395–403.
Arnold, P. J. (1979). Meaning in movement, sport and physical education. London, England:
Heinemann.
Beardsley, M. C. (1958). Aesthetics: Problems in the philosophy of criticism. New York, NY:
Harcourt Brace.
Best, D. (1985). Sport is not art. Journal of the Philosophy of Sport, 12, pp. 25–40.
Best, D. (1995). The aesthetic in sport. In W. J. Morgan & K. V. Meier (Eds.), Philosophic inquiry
in sport (2nd ed.) (pp. 377–389). Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics.
Blount Jr., R. (2014, September 16). Yogi: What did Berra say, when did he say it, and what
does it all mean? Sports Illustrated. Retrieved from https://www.si.com/mlb/2014/09/16/
yogi-berra-si-60-rou-blount-jr
Conway, R. (2017, December 6). The curious history of Olympic art competitions. Retrieved from
https://www.huffingtonpost.com/richard-conway/history-of-olympic-art-competitions_b_
1705248.html
De Coubertin, P. (1912). Ode au sport. Retrieved from http://www.olympic-museum.de/art/
ode_au_sport.htm
Fraleigh, W. P. (1973a). The moving “I.” In R. G. Osterhoudt (Ed.), The philosophy of sport (pp.
108–129). Springfield, IL: Charles C. Thomas.
Fraleigh, W. P. (1973b). Some meanings of the human experience of freedom and necessity
in sport. In R. G. Osterhoudt (Ed.), The philosophy of sport (pp. 130–141). Springfield, IL:
Charles C. Thomas.
Friedenberg, E. Z. (1967). Foreword. In H. S. Slusher, Man, sport, and existence: A critical analysis
(pp. vii–xiii). Philadelphia, PA: Lea & Febiger.
Gumbrecht, H. U. (2006). In praise of athletic beauty. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard
University.
Holowchak, M. A., & Reid, H. L. (2011). Aretism: An ancient sports philosophy for the modern
sports world. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books.
Hyland, D. A. (1990). Philosophy of sport. New York, NY: Paragon House.
For example, Vince Lombardi to become a coach to be remembered for his thoughts on
determination, dedication, and winning. Charles Dillon “Casey” Stengel didn’t necessarily think
about how his strategy of platooning would change baseball management. Yogi Berra didn’t
necessarily always mean to say what he said, but his thoughts are still profound, delightful, and
true. Maybe one of your coaches had a way of inspiring you and your team through words,
actions, or a combination of both. In all of these cases, philosophy is evident, even if the historical
figures would not have considered themselves philosophers.
In this chapter, you will be encouraged to think about your own philosophy and how it will
affect your career decisions and actions. No matter what branch of kinesiology you follow, the
way you think about yourself and your professional life will impact your behavior. Living an
authentic life and acting in accordance with your beliefs can help you maintain a sense of self, no
matter what situations arise in your personal and professional lives.
Depending on where you are, the importance of the local history of physical education and
sport may seem more or less important. A resident of Chicago can take pride in that city’s Major
League sports teams as well as their playgrounds, physical education curricula, and recreational
• Understand your institution’s or locality’s heritage. There are social and cultural influences
that have shaped your local physical education and athletics landscape.
• Bolster pride in the community and school spirit. Alumni like to reminisce about athletics,
coaches, teachers, and professors, and some alumni are historical figures themselves.
• Instill a sense of community and place in history to current residents and students. Let them
take a moment to reflect on what has gone before and cherish current history.
• Rediscover lost heritage. Did your town or college produce a Heisman Trophy winner? A
world champion cross-country runner?
• Preserve your history. You may be the only one who recognizes the historical importance of
keeping certain artifacts. Old programs, pennants, and equipment may seem worthless
today, but will be historically important (and possibly worth a lot of money) a century
from now.
Figure 15.2 Do you collect memorabilia and autographs? Knowing sports history can
make you a savvier consumer. You might even have a second career selling items like this
or even curating them for historical collections!
There is no right or wrong way to begin research into local history, and there are many ways to go
about it. The best advice is to follow what interests you. Sometimes history is preserved online,
but much of what is not online may be learned from books, archives, architecture, plaques,
and displays in museums or other buildings, and people’s communications about experiences.
Take time to notice the trophies, memorabilia, artworks, photographs, and banners that tell
your institution’s sports history or commemorate achievements in dance, health, recreation, and
kinesiology professions.
For example, if you love swimming, you might think about whether you prefer competitive
or recreational swimming. Remember that you can enjoy both, but you have to start somewhere!
Where to turn next?
If your interest is in competitive swimming, depending on what type of local history you are
seeking, consider visiting the following:
• Local historical society collections, who may have photos of waterfronts or pools,
• Local community newsletters,
• Social media groups dedicated to preserving memories of localities,
• Community members who recall swimming locally in a lake, pool, reservoir, or creek, and
• Local youth bureau or community recreation resources.
Once you start reading, you will find names, places, and other resources, and your challenge
will become capturing and keeping track of where you get your information, in case you ever
need to reference sources for any reason. Or you can just research for the fun of it, if you are
someone who enjoys delving into history for its own sake! In any case, no matter where you
are, these are good places to start, in addition to any online searches you do. Remember, not all
history is online, and not all sources are equal.
• Interview local coaches and athletes and create an online virtual gallery of their achievements,
housing it on a school’s or local community’s website.
• Write! Newspaper op-ed pieces, Letters to the Editor, and/or articles about sports and
physical education. Whether you are a student or a professional sports history researcher
submitting to a peer-reviewed journal, your contribution matters!
• Keep a journal or diary of your experiences in physical activity. What do you do? What
does a peak experience feel like for you? What do you hope to achieve? What competitions
did you enter, and what were the results? Add in scores, fleeting thoughts, impressions,
memories, snippets of song or poetry that come to mind, anything that will help you capture
your physical education and sport experiences.
• Organize an alumni sporting event, inviting alumni and coaches to take part. Collect photos
of them, record short clips of players’ and coaches’ comments, and create a short film.
You might even include others who were part of local athletics history like organ players,
announcers, concessions vendors, and mascots.
• Create memorable opportunities. For example, at a high school reunion, suggest a night at
the bowling alley as one of the activities, and take photos! Ask local veterans if they played
any sports, and find occasions to honor them at sporting events. Do you know of any former
athletes living at an assisted living facility? Find out if they might like a visit from some
youth players.
Always make every reasonable effort to obtain permissions to take and use photographs
or recordings, even if something seems totally innocuous. This applies to everyone, not just to
minors. Sometimes people (including parents/guardians of schoolchildren or children of senior
citizens in senior housing) will allow photographs, but not if there are names attached to them.
Respect the wishes of the participants and/or their legal guardians, just as you would want others
to respect yours.
1. Goal setting. Visualize the best possible career in the best possible geographic, physical,
and social environment for you. You do not need to write this down, but bear it in
mind like a mental snapshot or postcard. A career as a physical therapist is different
from a career as a fitness development expert or a sporting events manager. Imagine
it, and mentally set it aside. That’s your dream, and it’s made up of all your hopes and
aspirations for the future.
2. Experience. Tell your story. This is where you start writing. Tell about a time in your physical
activity life where you had to make a tough decision or where you needed to get through
something difficult. For example, did you ever see an opportunity to cheat in a competition
and have to make a decision about whether or not you would? Did your faith prohibit
traveling to compete on holy days, and if so, how did you work through that? Have you ever
encountered discrimination? What did you do? If you have several examples, go ahead and
describe each, being sure to include your responses to different situations. You will edit later;
now is the time to just get started writing from your personal experience.
3. Influences. Next, think about your experiences in life that led you to your career choice or
choice of college major. If occupational therapy is your career goal, for example, what have
you experienced in life that influenced that choice? Did you know someone who was an
OT, or someone who benefited from OT? If you are interested in working with the military,
police departments, or fire departments in fitness development, what inspired that interest?
4. Adaptability. Think about how you learn best and what learning experiences have been more
or less successful for you. You might be a kinesthetic learner, but then again, you might
not! Do you need visual, aural, or emotional cues or reinforcement? Are you logical? Detail
oriented? Now think about how you might work with someone who relies on a different
style of learning. How would you work with clients, students, athletes, or special-needs
populations who have styles that don’t match your own?
Figure 15.6 Plato (in Apology) indicated that an unexamined life is not worth
living. Self-reflection should continue throughout your life.
Now that you have studied a semester’s worth of history and philosophy, including reflecting on
your own history and philosophy, you should feel more secure in your understanding of where
we are, where we have been, and where we are going. That is the good news. Now here is what
some of you may consider the bad news: things will change.
We may not know what will change, or how, or when, but we know change will come.
After all, there was a time when people believed that Abner Doubleday invented baseball in
Cooperstown, New York. New research sheds new light on history, overturning it or modifying
it. As a professional, part of your job may entail following the latest developments in research
through consuming various media and attending professional conferences. As Yogi Berra told
us, “It ain’t over ’til it’s over” (Foster, 2015, para. 2). Your history is what you make of it.
Likewise, various philosophies of education will come in and out of favor, and you should
now have some rudimentary tools to make critical assessments of the strengths and weaknesses
of any new or revamped version of older philosophies. Expect new proposals for educational
changes at the federal, state, and local levels, and be ready to voice your opinion as an educated
practitioner.
Moreover, your personal philosophy is likely to change over time. Your experiences in life
and in the workplace may alter some of what you thought you believed. That is entirely normal;
it is part of learning and growing. It is possible that your deepest core values and beliefs will
be challenged, and that can be good or bad. On the other hand, you may always retain parts of
Figure 15.7 How will you be remembered? What will your legacy be?
SUMMARY
Below is a summary of main points from the chapter. Take a moment to review the Guiding
Questions. Then, read this summary to see how the content in the chapter responds to those
questions.
• Something becomes historic once it has happened. History is continuous, up to the present
moment in time.
• Each of us has a personal history, of which the importance may not be known in this lifetime.
The actions we take and the decisions we make exert an influence on events, institutions,
and other people.
• You should care about local history of physical education and sport because it helps you to
understand your place and the place of others in your community’s history.
• You can learn about local physical education and sport history through online sources,
personal communications such as interviews, archives, books, architectural structures and
their contents, museums, and local history centers.
• You can help preserve local history by becoming more aware of it and sharing it with others.
You can also encourage others to share their history.
• You should write a statement of your philosophy to reflect on your own knowledge, values,
and beliefs, and to be able to communicate those effectively with others.
• There are many ways to write a statement of personal philosophy. One method is offered in
this chapter.
• You should anticipate that history may change as new facts come to light. Similarly,
educational philosophies, including your personal philosophy, may well change over time
throughout your career.
The following are suggestions for assignments and activities related to this chapter. There is an
activity for writing a personal philosophy given in detail in the chapter. Students may do one or
more of the following to deepen their understanding of local history as covered in this chapter,
or develop similar group or individual projects using the ideas provided in this chapter.
1. Documentation (Visual): Think about the historical photos in this text, which give so much
information about past history. If you have skills as a photographer or videographer, take
photos or videos of current history! In some cases, you may need to get permissions
and/or releases, especially if you include people (particularly children, who need parent/
guardian permission) in your photos. What are the facilities like? What uniforms are worn
by the athletes? What does the equipment look like? If you are considering a career in
physical therapy or athletic training, what sorts of therapies and equipment are currently
used? Create a slideshow in PowerPoint or a folder of images and videos. Is there anyone
locally who would want to add the items to their archives? If permitted, can you upload the
images to online sites such as Wikimedia Commons?
2. Local History Paper (Research): Select a local sports team, dance company, settlement
house, turnverein, sports club, or facility (a roller skating rink, for example) and document
its history. Find out if there are archives or files you can use for research. Are there photos?
Who, what, where, when, and how are questions you should ask, but also ask “why”
questions. Contact your local library/librarians and historical society/docents for help getting
started. Research local newspaper archives online, if available. You might even contact
the owners of the facility or club/team/company management to request interviews and
suggestions for research or other people to contact. Be sure to document your process
and the people with whom you speak, and thank people for their help. Provide the team,
company, or facility with a copy of your final project for their archives. This activity could
lead to a short research article for a school newspaper or a full research paper.
3. Local Sports (Kinesthetic): Do you realize that many locales have a history of their own
particular games and sports? In today’s globalized society, it’s easy to forget that before
colonization, mass media, and the Internet, local versions of games and sports were
common. In Great Britain alone, local rules for football (soccer) made it difficult to create a
league for intercity competition, you may recall. Consider the changes in rugby, which led
to American football, Canadian football, and Australian (Aussie) rules football (footy), for
example. Irish dancer Jo McNamara has preserved and taught games and dances from her
childhood and shared them at New York City’s Irish Arts Center. Bess Lomax Hawes and
Bessie Jones preserved games from the Georgia Sea Islands and southern United States
in their 1987 book, Step It Down. What games and sports, or versions of those, were
historically played in your city or town? If possible, play one of these games or sports. If
your town has a vintage baseball team, can you attend a practice and talk with the players,
maybe even take a turn at bat? How might you find out about local games, sports, and
dances, and how might you be able to experience them?
FIGURE CREDITS
Fig. 15.1: Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Lew_McAllister,_Newark,_minor_
league_(baseball)_LCCN2014689109.tif.
Fig. 15.2: Copyright © 2009 by John Seb Barber, (CC BY 2.0) at https://commons.wikimedia.org/
wiki/File:Signed_SB_helmet_(3823064048).jpg.
Fig. 15.3: Copyright © 2004 by Stilfehler, (CC BY-SA 1.0) at https://commons.wikimedia.org/
wiki/File:Brand_Park_Pool.JPG.
Fig. 15.4: Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Action_at_Miami_University_
Varsity-Alumni_football_game_1922_(3190674155).jpg.
Fig. 15.5: Source: https://pixabay.com/illustrations/identity-mask-disguise-mindset-510866/.
Fig. 15.6: Source: https://pixabay.com/illustrations/identity-self-self-image-801212/.
Fig. 15.7: Source: https://pixabay.com/photos/in-love-thinking-poetry-poet-652485/.
REFERENCES
Hawes, B. L., & Jones, B. (1987). Step it down. Athens, GA: University of Georgia Press.
Foster, J. (2015, September 25). Yogi Berra’s “It ain’t over ’til it’s over” true in baseball as in life.
Sporting News. Retrieved from http://www.sportingnews.com/us/mlb/news/yogi-berra-dies-
quotes-its-not-over-till-its-over-yankees-comebacks-mets-red-sox-braves-indians/13tyjao2
mbhrf1jrgniroq2auz
Figure 16.1 A Patriots fan is interviewed outside after the NFL Super Bowl LII game, Minneapolis,
Minnesota (USA), 2018.
On the intercollegiate side, Division I athletics and television have created an entertainment
behemoth. However, contrary to expectations, that partnership does not usually result in
financial gains for the schools. According to Chudacoff (2015), “In 2013–14, of the 340 or so
college athletics programs in Division I where most opportunities for income lie, fewer than two
dozen had incomes that exceeded expenses” (p. 127). Multimillion-dollar salaries for coaches
(often among the highest-paid state employees) are only one part of the expenditures; marketing,
travel, facilities, equipment, the cost of putting on games, and scholarships all figure into the
budgets, and lucrative television contracts usually cannot offset the expense of major athletic
programs. Half of major football bowl game participants lose money because of expenses related
to participation in bowl games.
DISCUSS
1. Beyond television: online spectatorship. Many fans now watch sporting events, highlights,
commentary, and classic moments in sports via the Internet. How has this changed the
relationship between the spectator and the athletic performance? Consider also the role of
online forums, social media, and chat rooms in terms of connecting spectators to each other.
How is watching something online different from watching it on television? Many people
now use streaming television services, which can also deliver content to mobile devices: do
you watch sports on your tablet or phone?
2. Follow the money: who should reap the benefits of commercialization of sport? With the
amount of money being spent to provide sports entertainment, does that justify multimillion-
dollar contracts for professional athletes? Should student athletes be able to receive living
YOUTH SPORTS
Organized youth sports such as soccer, baseball, softball, football, cross-country running,
lacrosse, and volleyball have become an important part of the sports culture in the United States.
Over the years, travel teams and special sports academies have become more popular as ways to
gain skills and compete against other dedicated young regional athletes. However, in some cases,
(youth soccer, for example), only parents willing and able to spend thousands of dollars per year
on one child’s training are able to take advantage of these advanced opportunities (Carpenter,
2016). The high costs of youth sports participation have, in some cases, resulted in a lack of racial
and economic diversity at all playing levels.
Parents wanting the best possible athletic experience for their children often put pressure on
coaches and referees during games and sometimes resort to fighting with other parents, coaches,
or even players when they are angered by calls or behavior with which they disagree (Hennessy
& Schwartz, 2007). In some cases, parents push their children to specialize in a sport and work
at it year-round, incurring the risk of overuse injury or burnout (Matzkin & Garvey, 2019).
Some parents even go so far as to have children undergo genetic testing to determine which
sports activities and training regimens are best suited to their children. Specialized training
camps and teams offer advanced opportunities in some sports, but parents and coaches need to
investigate the costs and benefits of such programs carefully before committing money to what
may be of minimal practical use for a developing athlete. Most parents are content to see their
children happily engaged in organized sports, but a few adults are consumed by a win-at-all-
costs mentality, and this drive can blind them to the needs of youth in athletic programs.
Among those adults are some coaches who engage in bullying behaviors (yelling at players
or using training as punishment, for example) or emotional manipulation of players (neglecting
players, refusing playing time, and so on). Such coaches may not know any other way of running
a team because they experienced such behaviors when they were young players. Others see the
team’s win/loss record as a reflection on themselves and push their team’s athletes in order to
fulfill their own emotional needs.
Great coaches, however, leave a positive mark in the lives of young athletes. They can be
inspirations that last a lifetime. They sometimes become surrogate parents and trusted sounding
boards for their players, helping them deal with problems on and off the field (Vella, Oades, &
Crowe, 2013). How can we best encourage this type of coach and reduce the number of negative
coaching experiences in youth sports?
The National Alliance for Youth Sports (NAYS), the American Sport Education Program (run
through Human Kinetics), Positive Coaching Alliance, American Coaching Academy, World
Coach Institute, Up2Us Sports, National Council of Youth Sports (NCYS), Team USA, United
States Sports Academy, and other coaching certifications are available for coaches of youth sport.
Whichever certification is pursued, the emphasis should be on fun, safety, positive experiences,
teamwork, best practices, sportsmanship, building social skills, and cooperation. Keeping the
focus on the children and their needs should be a coach’s aim.
For more advanced and in-depth study, sociology and psychology of sport courses in higher
education should be expected of those in a coaching major program. Beyond certifications and
degrees, continuing education about concussion risks and treatment and sports injury prevention
and rehabilitation should be expected of coaches at all levels.
DISCUSS
1. If your philosophy of sport participation emphasizes the needs of youth, what goals would
that lead you to set for a youth sports program? For example, when it comes to motivating
participation, do you believe the experiences of practices and competitions (intrinsic
benefits) outweigh the need for trophies and extrinsic benefits?
2. Under what circumstances might it be necessary, or a good idea, for a young athlete or
dancer to specialize in one sport, one team position, one form of dance, etc.? Consider
the age of the athlete, the sport or dance style, and the demands of the activity. Do some
activities tend to favor younger participants?
INTERSCHOLASTIC SPORTS
For many years, going back as far as the early 1800s in some places in the United States, sports
have been a part of the high school experience for nearly all students. Even if students didn’t play
any sports, they probably attended pep rallies, played in a band, or attended a game or match.
The expectation was that participation on a team was available to all who qualified through their
skills or interests. While millions of high school students regularly participate in sports through
their schools, that situation is currently changing with school district budget woes, a model
known as pay-to-play, and no pass-no play policies.
In the United States, public school districts are funded by local taxes, and voters can approve
or reject proposed school budgets from year to year. In order to keep costs down, in recent
years schools have cut expenses by eliminating C-teams, which are athletic teams specifically
for first-year high school students. The expense of hiring
qualified coaches for teams is sometimes prohibitive. In the
past, certification as a coach was not considered essential
in many locales; thankfully, the current trend is toward
requiring adequate and ongoing certification through the
National Federation of State High School Associations
(NFHS), the American Sport Education Program (ASEP), or
other coaching certification organizations (Hoch, 2018).
In order to alleviate some of the costs associated with
funding an interscholastic team’s coach(es), uniforms,
conference fees, and travel, some schools have implemented
pay-to-play requirements. Under this system, any student
wishing to play on a sports team must pay, often hundreds
of dollars, to be on the team. In some cases, sports boosters
or district subsidization can provide funding for athletes,
but otherwise, parents must foot the bill. For families with
several siblings in high school at the same time, this can add
up to thousands of dollars per year. One study of Michigan
schools found that approximately 10% of athletes quit sports
participation if $100 was required in pay-to-play fees, and that
percentage doubled when the cost was $200 (Rowe, 2012).
Another issue facing interscholastic sports is no pass-no
play laws, in which a player who falls below a certain standard
academically is barred from participation in sports. Beginning
in Texas in 1984, for example, a student’s failing to maintain Figure 16.3 A student protests a round of funding cuts to
an average of 70 in every class would result in six weeks K–12 schools in Milwaukee, Wisconsin (USA). Sometimes
without practices or competitions. The Texas Supreme Court protests are necessary when funding cuts threaten
upheld the law. A decade later, the Texas law was revised to a athletic programs.
DISCUSS
1. As a matter of public policy (for student health and keeping the incidence of juvenile
delinquency low, for example), should public schools be expected and/or required to
provide athletic opportunities for all students, regardless of socioeconomic status? Why or
why not? At a time when childhood obesity is at epidemic levels, does it make sense to enact
pay-for-play policies?
2. Is there a risk that no pass-no play laws might lead to pressure on teachers to inflate failing
grades, from coaches and/or administrators who want to maintain player eligibility? Do
teachers have an obligation to offer extra credit, extra help, or special consideration to
athletes to help them maintain their eligibility? Philosophically, is it better for the individual
student or for the team to have a partial suspension from competition if it means they might
work harder in their academic classes?
3. When budget cuts are threatened at the school district level, extracurricular activities such
as arts and sports are often considered as “extras” so that they might be eliminated or scaled
back to save money. Are interscholastic sports essential to high schools, or are they a “frill”
that simply cannot always be afforded? If sports are cut in less-wealthy districts, which
demographic groups are most likely to be impacted?
• The Augusta National Golf Club in Augusta, Georgia, did not admit female members until
2012 and did not hold an Augusta National Women’s Amateur Championship until 2019.
Although Lee Elder broke the race barrier at Augusta’s male championship tournament in
1975, black members were not admitted until 1991. All caddies at that club had to be black
until 1983. Charles Sifford, who was the first black athlete on the PGA tour after the demise
of the Caucasian-only clause (in effect between 1934 and 1961), was harassed and received
death threats for playing professional golf.
• Similarly, when black driver Wendell Scott won a 1963
NASCAR race in Jacksonville, Florida, officials apparently
feared the crowd’s reaction and announced white driver Buck
Baker as the winner. After the crowds were gone, the officials
announced that Scott had actually won (Hembree, 2018; Zirin,
2008). In 2004, NASCAR started a Diversity Initiative (Drive
for Diversity) to encourage minority drivers (like Darrell
“Bubba” Wallace Jr.), support staff, and pit crews.
• In 1947 (when Jackie Robinson became the first African
American Major League Baseball player), Wat Misaka became
the first Asian American to play professional basketball. In
2019, Jeremy Lin was the only Asian American in the National
Basketball Association and had encountered racism in overt
and subtle forms.
• In 1967, Kathrine Switzer became the first woman to run the
Boston Marathon. At the time, race officials did not believe
women were capable of running long distances, so she entered
the race as “K. V. Switzer.” She was literally chased and grabbed
during the race by an official who tried to rip her bib number, Figure 16.4 Jackie Robinson (1919–1972): athlete,
261, from her body (Dator, 2017). civil rights activist, veteran.
DISCUSS
1. While sports teams in the NFL, NBA, and MLB in the United States are racially integrated,
other sports such as MLS (Major League Soccer) and the NHL are less so. Additionally,
team owners, managers, and head coaches tend to be male Caucasians. Why is this so? Is the
situation changing?
Figure 16.5 Cyclist Lance Armstrong (b. 1971) was stripped of seven Tour de France titles for his use of illegal
performance-enhancing drugs.
Among the threats to the integrity of sport we must also include biased judges or referees
(Ansorge & Scheer, 1988), cheating (Cady, 1971; Mather, 2015), and gambling. Along with
gambling, there is a strong incentive to attempt to “fix” matches and games or to have players
engage in point shaving (preventing a team from covering a published point spread, to benefit
spread bettors). Although the Interstate Wire Act of 1961 prohibits betting across state lines
(enacted to reduce the incidence of organized crime betting), a sport-specific law against sports
gambling in most states known as the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act of 1992
(PASPA) was effectively nullified in 2018. That year, the US Supreme Court, in Murphy v. National
Collegiate Athletic Association, 138 S. Ct. 1461 (2018), ruled that individual states may regulate
sports wagering. Under the Tenth Amendment to the US Constitution, any rights not explicitly
DISCUSS
1. Is it fair to require athletes to undergo drug testing? If more and more athletes are using
methods of performance enhancement, is it reasonable to expect athletes to comply with
anti-doping regulations when doing so puts them at a competitive disadvantage? Where do
athletes get PEDs? Do coaches, athletic trainers, and managers have a responsibility to stop
doping, or are they more likely to encourage it (or look the other way) if the athletes are
winning (as well as possibly earning championship bonuses and/or helping them keep their
jobs)? Will cheating via PEDs ever stop?
2. Most athletes have witnessed, experienced, or committed acts of cheating in sport. Is it just
part of the game? Is it fine as long as the cheater is not caught? Is it OK to bend the rules if
the goal of winning is met?
3. Gambling can become a serious addiction, and Gamblers Anonymous exists to help those
caught in its grip. On Wednesday, November 8, 1989, former National League baseball slugger
Pete Rose admitted to a gambling addiction (Hasen, 1989). In his 2004 autobiography, My
Prison Without Bars, he confessed to having bet on baseball games, and in 2007 he revealed
that he had, in fact, bet on his own team, the Cincinnati Reds, every night while he managed
the team. As a result of his gambling problem, Rose has been denied induction into the
Reds’ or the national Baseball Hall of Fame, where he would surely have been inducted after
1991 were he not banned. He is not allowed to participate in most on-field activities, so the
Reds have not retired his number (14) (“Rose Admits to Betting,” 2007). Do you believe
Rose should be inducted into the Reds’ and/or the Baseball Hall of Fame? If yes, should it be
during his lifetime?
VIOLENCE IN SPORTS
George Orwell (author of Animal Farm (1945) and Nineteen Eighty-Four (1949)) once opined,
“At the international level sport is frankly mimic warfare. … Serious sport has nothing to do
with fair play. It is bound up with hatred, jealousy, boastfulness, disregard of all rules and sadistic
pleasure in witnessing violence: in other words it is war minus the shooting” (1945, para. 4,
6). Researchers have found that sports aggressiveness increases spectators’ (particularly male
spectators’) enjoyment of watching sports, and that when sportscasters highlight roughness,
Figure 16.6 Fighting became so prevalent in hockey that comedian Rodney Dangerfield joked, “I went to the fights the other
night and a hockey game broke out.” The NHL has taken measures to reduce the incidents of fighting in games.
Coaches have been known to encourage or ignore violence against the players of opposing
teams or even officials. From 2009–2011, some New Orleans Saints football team players took
part in Bountygate, in which they were paid bonuses for deliberately injuring opponents (“Saints
Bounty Scandal,” 2013). In 2015, two football players from John Jay High School in San Antonio,
Texas, were told by their coach to attack a referee; they did so, and were expelled from the team
and suspended from school. Their coach resigned, was suspended from all coaching for a year,
and served probation (Green, 2015). What do actions like this teach youth about sports?
Boxer Mike Tyson bit off the ear of Evander Holyfield in a 1997 fight, only a couple years after
he had served a prison sentence for the rape of Desiree Washington, a beauty pageant contestant.
While men commit most of the violence in sport, women are not immune to its lure and its
DISCUSS
1. International soccer striker Luis Suarez has explained that he bites opponents when the
adrenaline, fear of failure, sense of responsibility for winning, and pent-up frustration he
feels during some games cannot be controlled (Tomarchio, 2014). He has been working to
be able to control his feelings, accepting blame and seeking help to change his behavior.
His biting led to his being suspended from play in at least three instances between 2010
and 2014, with his famous 2014 World Cup bite of Italy’s Giorgio Chiellini resulting in a
nine-game ban from international play and a four-month ban on soccer activities—one of
the longest bans in sports history. Players who inflict other types of injuries are not subjected
to bans of that length, even if the damage they do to other players is more severe or has more
lasting repercussions. He was allowed to finish the Uruguay/Italy World Cup Game in 2014
with no punishment from the referees after he bit Chiellini. Should he have been sidelined
immediately? Were his other punishments too harsh? Do players have a moral responsibility
to the public to live up to the highest standards of sportsmanship? Who is responsible for
ensuring the safety of other players?
2. The evidence shows that reported incidents of violence related to sport most often involve
men. However, the statistics are changing. One study by Kerr (2016) found that women
enjoyed the violence of team sports such as rugby and ice hockey. In some cases, female
athletes reported anger violence, loss of control, and a willingness to break rules and
use violence against opponents. One clinical sport psychologist who specializes in anger
management in sports has noted the recent rise of violence in women’s sports and believes it
is an indication of a wider societal toleration of violence (Abrams, 2010). What do you think?
Are male, female, non-binary, and/or gender nonconforming people more likely to engage
in violent sports (where violence is part of the game) or unacceptable violent behavior? If it
is a question of testosterone, are female athletes with high testosterone levels more likely to
engage in unsanctioned violent behavior? Can violence have a positive, empowering effect
on the psyches of female athletes, or should it be discouraged in all instances?
3. As of 2019, the NFL had paid out millions of dollars (of a one-billion-dollar settlement) in
claims related to players’ concussions that led to brain damage (Dale, 2019). High school
football teams, even in the football-loving state of Texas, are seeing declining numbers,
due in large part to concerns about brain trauma and other injuries (Lehren, Monahan,
Friedman, & Enright, 2018). The sport of football has a long history of violence, injuries,
and even deaths: don’t players know about the risks before they start playing? If they don’t
realize the risks when they are young, are they aware of the risks before they sign collegiate
and professional contracts to play? What changes have been implemented in training to
help reduce the incidence of head injuries? Who provides insurance for athletes, from youth
players through the professional level, to cover expenses related to injuries incurred during
practices or competitions? Did the NFL disclose the risks of repeated head hits, even after
SUMMARY
Below is a summary of main points from the chapter. Take a moment to review the Guiding
Questions. Then, read this summary to see how the content in the chapter responds to those
questions.
• The traditional media of newspapers, magazines, radio, and television controlled how the
spectator received information about sporting events, but online media allow the spectator
to control the experience of sports using interactive controls and give more choices of events
to spectators. The associated commercialization of sport has, in various ways, caused the
cost of in-person attendance at professional sporting events to rise, sometimes becoming
prohibitive to ordinary fans.
• Some of the issues surrounding youth sports include access, parental and coaching behaviors,
pressure to win, and specialization.
• Some of the problems facing interscholastic sports include budget cuts leading to cutting of
teams, pay-to-play requirements, and no pass-no play policies.
• Some issues facing women and minorities in sports and dance are discrimination, misogyny,
homophobia, religious observance restrictions, and unclear or unfair policies regarding
transgender, intersex, or other non-binary athletes.
• Some threats to the integrity of sport are doping, cheating, unfair officiating or judging, and
gambling.
• Violence is, in some cases, a normal part of sports. However, in cases of sexual abuse, extreme
violence on and off the playing field, animal fighting, and spectator violence, the behavior
goes beyond normal parameters.
FIGURE CREDITS
Fig. 16.1: Copyright © 2018 by Lorie Shaull, (CC BY-SA 2.0) at https://commons.wikimedia.org/
wiki/File:A_Patriots_fan_is_interviewed_outside_after_Super_Bowl_LII,_Minneapolis_MN_
(39220732655).jpg.
Fig. 16.2: Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Basketball_gateway_to_youth_
mentoring_program_130222-M-ZB219-139.jpg.
Fig. 16.3: Copyright © 2018 by Charles Edward Miller, (CC BY-SA 2.0) at https://
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Milwaukee_Public_School_Teachers_and_Supporters_
Picket_Outside_Milwaukee_Public_Schools_Adminstration_Building_Milwaukee_
Wisconsin_4-24-18_1164_(39925468070).jpg.
Fig. 16.4: Copyright © 2018 by Osbrun, (CC BY-SA 4.0) at https://commons.wikimedia.org/
wiki/File:Jackie_Robinson_batejant.jpg.
Fig. 16.5: Copyright © 2002 by Hase, (CC BY-SA 3.0) at https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/
File:Lance_Armstrong_MidiLibre_2002.jpg.
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Ansorge, C. J., & Scheer, J. K. (1988). International bias detected in judging gymnastic competition
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Bowleg, L. (2012). The problem with the phrase women and minorities: Intersectionality—an
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Chudacoff, H. P. (2015). Changing the playbook: How power, profit, and politics transformed
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269
INDEX
271
Boston Marathon, 165, 257 Cogswell, Joseph Green, 110 country line, 258
Boston Normal Gymnastics colonialism, 78, 173, 174 courtly, 64, 85
School, 115 Colosseum, 25, 39, 40 courtship, 20, 84
Bountygate, 249, 262 commercialism. See also commer- created, 83, 94, 98, 109
Bowen, Anthony, 120 cial sponsorship Dionysian (tyrbasia), 33
bowling. See also bowls, ninepins commercialization, 141, 248, 252 folk, 34, 179, 180
boxing, 27, 28, 32 Committee on Women's Athletics funeral, 28, 34, 181
Boy Scouts of America, 121 (CWA), 143 galop, 103
Brazil, 165, 177 common schools movement, 109, gumboot, 131
British public school, 90, 91, 154 122 hambone, 131
British public school ideal, 92, 100 competition manipulation, 172, hunting, 61, 65, 80, 132
British sports model, 90, 154 175 Israeli folk, 180, 184
Buddhism, 51, 52, 207 concept mapping, 173, 183 Kathak, 131, 182
bull-vaulting. See also bull-leaping, Confucianism, 207 Lancers, 103
course landaise bull-leaping, Confucius, 51, 212 ländler, 103
course landaise consequentialism, 203 malambo, 131
Burchenal, Elizabeth. See Constantinople, 59, 73, 102 mazurka, 103
also American Folk Dance corps de ballet, 90, 92 minuet, 78, 85
Society Coubertin, Pierre de, 157, 175, 217 Morris, 59, 67, 68
bushido, 202, 208 Counter-reformation, 58, 71, 73 peasant, 60
buzkashi, 55, 263 Country Dance & Song Society percussive, 128, 131
Byzantium, 58, 59 (CDSS), 183 popular, 41, 105, 112, 115, 218,
Crete, 27, 28, 54 253, 258
cricket, 100, 135 quadrille, 92, 103
C
cult, 38, 60 ritual, xiv, 19, 224
C-teams, 248, 255
cultural appropriation, 173, 182 round, 19, 34
Caledonian games, 128, 132, 144
cultural imperialism, 173, 182 sacred, 179
calisthenics, 96, 109, 117, 118, 119
Cultural Olympiad, 217, 218 Salii, 26, 41
Camp Fire Girls, 121
Curtis, Henry, 155 Schuhplattler, 131
campidoctores, 25, 36
Czech, 91, 96 social, 136, 142, 148, 152
camping, 94, 111, 156
square, 167, 180
Campus Martius, 37 D stepping, 34, 131
capoeira, 134 dakyu, 46, 51 tap, 131, 132, 179
Caroso, Fabritio, 67 dance. See also dancing, dancers Tibetan step dance, 131
Carroll, Douglas, 15, 17, 21 dance ethnology, 15. See waltz, 91, 92, 103
carryover sports. See also lifetime also dance anthropology zapateado, 131
sports Dance of Death, 5 dancesport, 179
Cassidy, Rosalind, 151 dance, ancient Greek Danish gymnastics. See
Castiglione, Baldassare, 66 clashers, 34 also Nachtegall, Franz
categorical imperative, 202, 209 Emméleia, 34 Darwin. See also Darwinism
chariot racing, 30, 35, 53, 59 Gymnopaidiai, 33, 34 Day's Order, 99, 114
Charles II, 59, 70 Hyporchémata, 34 Deaflympics, 151, 165
Chautauqua, 117 paian, 34 deductive reasoning, 2, 6, 15
chi-kung, 46, 52 Pyrrhic (Pyrrhichē), 34 Delsarte, François. See
childbirth. See also motherhood dance, forms, 11, 131 also Delsartism
children, 7, 16, 136, 152, 164 ballet, 71, 172, 181 Delsartism. See also applied
China, 9, 51, 207 ballroom, 103, 179 aesthetics
chivalry, 58, 64 bugaku, 180 Denmark, 97, 98
Circus Maximus, 25, 39, 40 character, 90, 92 deontological reasoning, 202
Civil Rights Act of 1964, 150, 162, classical, 180, 181, 182 Descartes, René, 71, 191
166 classic ceremonial ritual, 173, descriptive historical research, 2
clean athletes, 173, 175 180 descriptive reasoning, 2, 6
clergy, 58, 62, 63, 82 clogging, 131 de Sousa Santos, Boaventura, 172,
climbing poles, 112 comic (komos), 33 173
coach. See also coaches contradance (longways dance), Dewey, John, 151, 156
cockfighting, 36, 65, 83, 133 78, 85 disability. See also disabilities
cognitive domain, 2 cotillion, 92, 103
INDEX 273
individualized transition plan Japan. See also Japanese
(ITP), 150, 164 javelin, 36 M
Individuals with Disabilities Edu- Jefferson, Thomas, 84 Maccabiah Games, 258
cation Act (IDEA) of 1990, 167 Jewish sports clubs, 102. See Major League Baseball (MLB), 160
inductive reasoning, 7 also Maccabi, Bar Kochba Major League Soccer (MLS), 160
instrumentalism, 188, 194 jockey, 138 Manifest Destiny, 108, 109
integrity of sport, 259 joust, 58, 63, 64 Mann, Horace, 109, 122
intention, 216 jump rope, 158 marching, 29, 36
intentional fallacy, 216, 223 jumping, 84, 85, 181 martial arts, 52, 56, 163
intercollegiate, 141 jumping stands, 112 massage, 106, 109
internal critical review, 3, 5 McCloy, Charles, 149
International Association for Dance McCloy, Charles. See
K also McCloy Test of Pres-
Medicine and Science, 179
kabbadi, 183 ent Health; See also General
International Association for the
Kadman, Gurit, 180 Motor Capacity Test; See
Philosophy of Sport (IAPS),
kalokagathia, 24, 26, 32 also General Motor Ability
190
kalon, 202, 205 Test
International Association of Ath-
Kant, Immanuel, 209 McKenzie, R. Tait, 218
letics Federations (IAAF), 258
Kellogg, John Harvey, 135 media, 245, 248
International Association of Blacks
Keynes, John Maynard, 155 Mesoamerican ball game, 46, 49
in Dance, 179
kickball, 81, 224 metaphysics, 188, 209, 214
International Conference of Min-
Kierkegaard, Søren, 195 Middle Ages, 60, 64, 65. See
isters and Senior Officials
kinesiology, 2, 198 also medieval
Responsible for Physical Edu-
king's forest, 61 Middle East, 206
cation and Sport, 177, 186
kisha, 46, 51 military, 30, 41, 45
International Council for Health,
knighthood, 58. See military drills, 94
Physical Education, Rec-
also knights-errant militia training days, 82
reation, Sport, and Dance
Korea, 207 Mill, John Stuart, 203, 209, 210
(ICHPERD SD), 175, 183
Kraus-Weber Minimum Test, 11 Minoan, 27, 56
International Council of Sports
kung-fu, 52 minorities, 177, 248
Science and Physical Educa-
tion (ICSSPE), 175, 183 Mitchell Report, The, 259
International Dance Council, 183. L monism, 59, 65
See also (Conseil International lacrosse, 58. See also kabucha, monitorial educational system, 95
de la Dance (CID) toli, anetsó, hótti icósi, morality, 212. See also moral
International Dance Entrepreneurs bagataway moral reasoning, 202, 209
Association, 179 ladders, 91, 112 Morgan, William G., 110, 121
International Olympic Committee, Lardner, Ring, 250 Mosier, Chris, 258
157, 172, 183 Lascaux cave paintings, 21 motor development, 164
Interregnum, 70. See also Oliver leisure, 149, 154 Moulton, Charles, 229
Cromwell leisure society, the, 155 muscular Christianity, 90, 151
intersectionality, 149, 155 leisure studies, 148 Muscular Judaism, 92, 102. See
Interstate Wire Act of 1961, 260 Lewis, Diocletian, 109 also Muskeljudentum
intramural sports, 142 LGBTQ, 267. See also LGBT+ musculoskeletal stress markers
Irish-American sports, 81 light gymnastics, 109 (MSMs), 16
Gaelic football, 132 Ling, Hjalmar, 105, 114. See music, 30
hurling, 132 also Day's Order Mycenaean, 28. See also Aechaean
rifle drilling, 132 Ling, Per Henrik, 98, 109
lists, 131, 144 N
Iron Age, 22 Nachtegall, Franz, 97
Iroquois, 80 Lloyd Shaw Foundation, 5, 179, 269
Naismith, James, 120
Islamic ethics, 206 Locke, John, 60, 71
Nash, Jay, 156
Italy, 63, 67, 90 Louis XIV, 70, 71
National Alliance for Youth Sports
Lully, Jean-Baptiste, 70
(NAYS), 253
Luther, Martin, 68
J Luxembourg, 96 National Association for Girls and
Jahn, Friedrich Ludwig, 94, 110 Women in Sport (NAGWS),
Lyon, Mary, 117. See also Mount
James I, 59. See also James VI of 164
Holyoke College
Scotland
INDEX 275
Sanity Code, 167 also golf; See also gymnas- Symbolic Hunt Theory, 15, 17
Sargent, Dudley, 115, 123 tics; See also handball; symbolism in sport, 60. See
Sartre, Jean-Paul, 196 See also harness racing; also magic in sport
Schnepfenthal Institute, 91, 93 See also horse racing; See synthesis, 3, 5
scholarship, 3, 208 also ice hockey; See also ice-
Scottish Games, 144 skating; See also integrity
T
scutage, 58, 63 of; See also intercollegiate;
tableaux mouvants, 109, 116. See
Seccombe, Joseph, 82 See also interscholastic; See
also tableaux vivants
secondary source, 3, 5, 15 also intramural; See also Irish-
Taoism, 207. See also Taoist
semi-professional(s), 150 American; See also javelin; See
Tarahumara, 81, 88. See
sepak takraw, 51, 55, 183. See also Jewish; See also karate;
also Rarámuri
also sepak raga See also kickball; See
Teaching Games for Understand-
settlement houses, 108, 109, 119 also lacrosse; See also lifetime;
ing (TGfU), 149, 154
Shaolin Monastery, 52, 207 See also martial arts; See
telegraphic meet, 128, 142
shinny, 78 also pentathlon; See also polo;
teleological reasoning, 203
shooting, 82 See also prizefighting; See
television, 251, 252
Shriver, Eunice Kennedy, 151, 165 also professional; See also pur-
temperance, 90, 91
Shrovetide, 100 posive; See also rugby; See
tennis, 158. See also jeu de paume
shukiku, 46, 51. See also kemari also running; See also soccer;
therapeutic use exemption (TUE),
Simon, Johann Friedrich, 93 See also swimming; See
248
skill-based physical education, 3 also symbolism or magic in;
thermae, 37
skittles, 78, 83 See also tennis; See also track
Thorpe, James (Jim), 157
slaves, 133. See also slavery and field; See also trampoline;
three-prong test, 162
Society of Health and Physical See also trespass; See also var-
tip (square dance), 167
Educators (SHAPE America), sity; See also volleyball; See
Title IX, 150, 161
9, 12 also walking; See also wres-
13 program areas, the, 150, 162
socioeconomic status (SES), 256. tling; See also youth
Tom Brown's School Days, 100
See also socioeconomic strata, Sport Education Model (SEM),
tournament, 63. See also melee
socioeconomic standing 149. See also Sport Education
track and field, 136
softball, 139 curriculum and instructional
trampoline, 158
Sokol gymnastics, 91, 97 model
transgender, 248, 258
South America, 46 sporting fraternity, the, 137. See
trespass sport, 83
South Carolina, 83, 136 also "the fancy"
tsu-chu, 51
Spain, 90 sport, purposive, 216, 222
Turkish baths, 60
Sparta, 28 sprezzatura, 59, 66
turners, 91, 94, 95
special needs, 148 squire, 58, 64
turnfest, 95, 96
Special Olympics, 151 stade, 25, 32
turnplatz, 94, 95
speculative reasoning, 3, 7 stall bars, 92, 99
turnvater, 91, 95. See also Jahn,
Spiess, Adolph, 91, 97. See statement of personal philosophy,
Friedrich
also (Adolf) 232, 240
turnverein, 91, 94, 96
sport, 2. See also amateur; See Steroid Era, the, 249, 259
Tyrš, Miroslav, 96
also archery; See also base- steroids, 267
tyzkanion, 60, 73
ball; See also basketball; See stoicism, 205
also bicycling; See also body Stone Age, 16, 19. See
building; See also bowl- also paleolithic U
ing; See also boxing; See Strutt, Joseph, 110. See also The U. S. Department of Health and
also carryover; See also cup Sports and Pastimes of the Human Services, 257
stacking; See also danc- People of England U. S. Olympic Committee, 158
esport; See also discus; See Suarez, Luis, 264, 268 U. S. Soccer, 169
also diving; See also falconry; Super Bowl, 159, 160, 251 U. S. Women's Soccer Team, 169
See also fencing; See also field Supreme Court, 260 United Nations Education,
hockey; See also fishing; Sweden, 22, 98 Scientific and Cultural Orga-
See also fives; See also foot- Swedish gymnastics, 90, 99 nization (UNESCO), 176, 183
ball; See also footracing; Swedish movement cure, 99, 109 usekh, 46, 54
See also fox hunting; See swimming, 111, 112, 236 utilitarianism, 203
also Golden Age of; See Switzerland, 96, 107
INDEX 277