University of Toronto, Canada.
Third World Q. 2011;32(3):435-52. doi: 10.1080/01436597.2011.573939.
Governments, UN agencies and international and local NGOs have mounted a concerted effort to remobilise sport as a vehicle for broad, sustainable social development. This resonates with the call for sport to be a key component in national and international development objectives. Missing in these efforts is an explicit focus on physical education within state schools, which still enroll most children in the global South. This article focuses on research into one of the few instances where physical education within the national curriculum is being revitalised as part of the growing interest in leveraging the appeal of sport and play as means to address social development challenges such as HIV/AIDS. It examines the response to the Zambian government's 2006 Declaration of Mandatory Physical Education (with a preventive education focus on HIV/AIDS) by personnel charged with its implementation and illustrates weaknesses within the education sector. The use of policy instruments such as decrees/mandates helps ensure the mainstreaming of physical education in development. However, the urgency required to respond to new mandates, particularly those sanctioned by the highest levels of government, can result in critical pieces of the puzzle being ignored, thereby undermining the potential of physical education (and sport) within development.
政府、联合国机构以及国际和地方非政府组织已经协同努力,重新将体育作为实现广泛可持续社会发展的手段。这与呼吁将体育作为国家和国际发展目标的关键组成部分是一致的。在这些努力中,缺失了对公立学校体育教育的明确关注,而公立学校仍然招收全球南方的大多数儿童。本文聚焦于为数不多的几个案例之一的研究,即国家课程中的体育教育如何作为日益增长的利用体育和游戏吸引力来应对社会发展挑战(如艾滋病)的一部分得到振兴。本文考察了赞比亚政府 2006 年发布的强制性体育教育宣言(重点关注艾滋病预防教育)的实施情况,以及负责实施的人员所面临的教育部门的弱点。使用法令/命令等政策工具有助于确保体育教育在发展中的主流地位。然而,应对新命令(特别是政府最高层批准的命令)所需的紧迫性可能导致忽视关键部分,从而削弱体育教育(和体育)在发展中的潜力。