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E-raamat: Contemporary Developments in Games Teaching

Edited by (West Virginia University, USA), Edited by (University of Melbourne, Australia), Edited by (University of Canterbury, New Zealand), Edited by (Federation University, Australia)
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The teaching of games is a central component of any physical education or youth sport programme. Contemporary Developments in Games Teaching brings together leading international researchers and practitioners in physical education and sports coaching to examine new approaches in games teaching and team sport coaching that are player/student-centred and inquiry-based.

The book aims to bridge the gap between research and practice by exploring contemporary games teaching from pedagogical, policy and research perspectives. It offers interesting new commentary and research data on well-established models such as Teaching Games for Understanding (TFfU), Game Sense, and the Games Concept Approach (GCA), as well as introducing innovative and exciting approaches emerging in East Asia, including Singapore, Japan and Taiwan.

Representing the most up-to-date survey of new work in contemporary games teaching around the world, this book is invaluable reading for any student, researcher, in-service teacher or sports coach with an interest in games teaching or physical education.

List of contributors
ix
Introduction 1(12)
Richard L. Light
Amanda Mooney
PART I Recent pedagogical and policy developments in games teaching
13(72)
1 Game as context in physical education: a Deweyan philosophical perspective
15(14)
John Quay
Steven Stolz
2 Positive pedagogy for physical education and sport: Game Sense as an example
29(14)
Richard L. Light
3 Teaching how to play and teach games in Singapore: a decade in the field
43(14)
Joan Marian Fry
Michael Charles Mcneill
4 Innovation in the Japanese games curriculum
57(14)
Naoki Suzuki
5 Play Practice: an innovative model for engaging and developing skilled players in sport
71(14)
Wendy Piltz
PART II Research on the implementation of game-based approaches
85(62)
6 Recent trends in research literature on game-based approaches to teaching and coaching games
87(16)
Kendall Jarrett
Stephen Harvey
7 `Girls get going': Using Game Sense to promote sport participation amongst adolescent girls in rural and regional contexts
103(15)
Amanda Mooney
Meghan Casey
8 The influence of school context on the implementation of TGfU across a secondary school physical education department
118(15)
Christina Curry
Richard L. Light
9 The nature and importance of coach-player relationships in the uptake of Game Sense by elite rugby coaches in Australia and New Zealand
133(14)
John Robert Evans
PART III Issues in adopting game-based approaches
147(60)
10 Subjectivity as a resource for improving players' decision making in team sport
149(18)
Alain Mouchet
Remy Hassanin
11 Questions and answers: understanding the connection between questioning and knowledge in game-centred approaches
167(11)
Greg Forrest
12 The body thinking: assessment in game-centred approaches to teaching and coaching
178(15)
Stephen Harvey
Edward Cope
Ruan Jones
13 Learning games concepts by design
193(14)
Adrian P. Turner
Conclusions 207(8)
Stephen Harvey
John Quay
Richard L. Light
Index 215
Richard Light is Professorial Research Fellow in Human Movement in the School of Health Sciences at the University of Ballarat, Australia.



John Quay is Program Director for and lecturer in Pedagogy, Health and Physical Education at the Melbourne Graduate School of Education, Australia.





Stephen Harvey is Principal Lecturer in Physical Education and Sport at the University of Bedfordshire, England.









Amanda Mooney is Program Co-ordinator for the Bachelor of Education (Physical Education) and lecturer in the School of Health Sciences at the University of Ballarat, Australia.