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Physical education for Soviet children and teacher and coach education. Physical education for children (to seventeen years). An historical overview and contemporary study of organisation and methods. An examination of the professional training of physical education teachers and sports coaches.
Evans-Worthing, Lesley J.
Evans-Worthing, Lesley J.
Publication Date
2010-07-06T14:52:09Z
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The University of Bradford theses are licenced under a Creative Commons Licence.
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University of Bradford
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Postgraduate School of Studies in Languages and European Studies.
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1987
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Abstract
The starting point for this study was when as a
specialist physical education teacher working in a school,
I undertook a part-time inservice B. Ed degree and wrote a
dissertation comparing the systems of physical education in
the USSR and in England and Wales. I made one visit in 1979
to Moscow but, otherwise, had to rely heavily upon Western
sources of material owing to my lack of knowledge of Russian
and the difficulty in obtaining primary source material.
I discovered that virtually no profound study in English
had been made of children's physical education in one of the
world's largest and most important countries. Yet since
the early 1950s, the USSR has been one of the leading sporting
nations in international competitions.
For many years I have been interested in comparative
physical education and, helped by my background of foreign
languages' study at school, have visited schools in the USA,
Canada, Germany, Austria and Israel, as well as the USSR.
In 1981, I began work as a university lecturer with
responsibilities for teacher training and started to gather
information for this thesis for which I had to learn Russian,
helped by staff at the Centre for Modern Languages at the
University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne.
During several study visits to the USSR, I visited
1981 - Two weeks sports study tour to Moscowt Leningrad
and Minsk.
1983 - Four weeks in Leningrad.
1985 - Six weeks in Moscow, Leningrad and Brest on a
British Council Travel Scholarship.
USSR Ministry of Education Offices, teacher training institutions, schools, sports schools and other sports
institutions, interviewed officials, lecturers, teachers,
students and pupils and observed lectures, lessons and training
sessions. In addition, I gathered text books, syllabuses
and journals and, after several years of research and study
visits, set out to describe and examine all aspects of Soviet
children's physical education from preschool to school-leaving
age as well as the training of their teachers and coaches.
It has been necessary to describe the whole physical
education system since it is a more complex series of
activities in and out of school than what we in England and
Wales, understand as physical education, that is, lessons in
school. Descriptions are fairly extensive since readers are
unlikely to be able to read the sources in Russian for themselves
or to make their own visits.
Because the concept of physical education in the USSR
is so different compared to our own, and because its structure
is determined by the state of development and needs of
Soviet society, a background description of the country and
education system is given in Chapter I and an explanation of
the development of Soviet sport and physical education in
Chapter II.
The concepts of Soviet physical culture, sport and
physical education are different to our own and are explained.
Soviet terminology in direct translation is used, for example,
school physical education programmes, but physical culture
lessons and teachers to emphasise the different concepts
which are employed.
The aims, methods and reasons behind the system of
physical education for Soviet children are described and
analysed and the theory and practice of its implementation
have been investigated through primary sources - syllabuses,
visits, observations. and interviews.
The effectiveness of physical education for all Soviet
children is discussed and some cross-cultural comparisons
are made. Finally, suggestions are put to physical educators
in England and Wales on how this study might be useful to
them when considering changes in their own physical education
system.
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Qualification name
PhD