Aasland Erik, Engelsrud Gunn
Department of Sport Science and Physical Education, University of Agder, Kristiansand, Norway.
Department of Sport, Food and Natural Sciences, Western Norway University of Applied Sciences, Bergen, Norway.
Front Sports Act Living. 2021 Nov 15;3:769756. doi: 10.3389/fspor.2021.769756. eCollection 2021.
Throughout society, including in the field of sports and physical education (PE), there are extensive debates on racism and structural racism. Researchers have found that students of color experience racial stereotyping and discrimination in PE. Studies also show that PE teaching practices reflect a masculine culture, emphasizing traditional (Western) competitive male sports and physical fitness practices, while marginalizing female students of color. Simultaneously these students also negotiate, resist, and operate as visible agents within these practices. While previous research has tended toward focusing on the experiences (of discrimination) from the perspective of students of color, numerous scholars today argue for a shift in research focus from the inadequacies of the racialized "others" toward how (white) everyday pedagogical practices privilege some people, and conversely, marginalize and discriminate against students of color. We believe, however, that it is crucial to examine and direct attention toward the students who "encounter" discriminatory practices in PE. (i) To investigate what kind of movements, knowledge/skills and bodies are valued and privileged, or ignored/discriminated in teaching practices in PE. (ii) To depict the "encounter" between the teaching content in physical education lessons and the female students of color's movements and expressions. Our sample consisted of institutionalized pedagogical practices enacted by four white PE teachers in an upper secondary school located in eastern Oslo, Norway. The empirical material consisted of observations and informal conversations extracted from 42 teaching lessons. Students from a great diversity of backgrounds participated in the lessons during our study. We chose a critical whiteness perspective and critical feminist theory as analytical lenses for the analyses. Strenuous exercise as a means of becoming physically fit and "healthy" was central during the PE lessons under observation. The teacher's instructions draw on healthism discourses influenced by knowledge from exercise physiology and biomechanics, which produce a normative ideal for the body and movements in PE teaching practice. The movements and expressions of female students of color did not meet the expected norm of intensity, activity and exercises from the health and sport discourses. However, we identified female students of color as competent movers when performing "their own" movements, with which they had more of a cultural connection. These students also expressed vitality, joy and social interaction. Thus, they created new movements and expressions that contrasted with the norm of working out with a high intensity level in PE lessons. Hegemonic "truths" about the body, physical exercise and health make teachers "blind" to the ways that institutionalized pedagogical practices in PE privilege majority ethnic white (male) students. Refusing to adhere to the institutionalized movement/exercise practices enacted by the teachers, the female students of color are competent dancers and express liveliness, spontaneity, and joy. In the future, incorporating these types of expressions to teaching practices can add value to PE.
在整个社会,包括体育和体育教育(PE)领域,关于种族主义和结构性种族主义存在广泛的辩论。研究人员发现,有色人种学生在体育教育中经历种族刻板印象和歧视。研究还表明,体育教学实践反映了一种男性化文化,强调传统(西方)竞争性男性运动和健身实践,同时将有色人种女学生边缘化。与此同时,这些学生也在这些实践中进行协商、抵制,并作为可见的行动者发挥作用。虽然以前的研究倾向于从有色人种学生的角度关注(歧视)经历,但如今许多学者主张将研究重点从种族化的“他者”的不足转向(白人)日常教学实践如何使一些人享有特权,反之,如何边缘化和歧视有色人种学生。然而,我们认为,审视并关注在体育教育中“遭遇”歧视性做法的学生至关重要。(i)调查在体育教学实践中,什么样的动作、知识/技能和身体被重视、享有特权,或被忽视/歧视。(ii)描绘体育课教学内容与有色人种女学生的动作和表现之间的“遭遇”。我们的样本包括挪威奥斯陆东部一所高中的四名白人体育教师所实施的制度化教学实践。实证材料包括从42节课程中提取的观察结果和非正式对话。在我们的研究期间,来自各种背景的学生参与了这些课程。我们选择批判性白人视角和批判性女性主义理论作为分析的视角。在观察到的体育课中,剧烈运动作为一种强身健体和“健康”的手段至关重要。教师的指导借鉴了受运动生理学和生物力学知识影响的健康主义话语,这些话语在体育教学实践中为身体和动作产生了一种规范性理想。有色人种女学生的动作和表现不符合健康与体育话语中预期的强度、活动和锻炼规范。然而,我们发现有色人种女学生在进行“她们自己的”动作时是有能力的行动者,她们与这些动作有更多的文化联系。这些学生还表现出活力、喜悦和社交互动。因此,她们创造了与体育课高强度锻炼规范形成对比的新动作和表现。关于身体、体育锻炼和健康的霸权“真理”使教师对体育教育中制度化教学实践使多数族裔白人(男性)学生享有特权的方式“视而不见”。有色人种女学生拒绝遵守教师制定的制度化动作/锻炼实践,她们是有能力的舞者,表现出活力、自发性和喜悦。未来,将这些类型的表现纳入教学实践可以为体育教育增添价值。