Faculty Perspective Regarding Practical Experience of Adapted Physical Education for Undergraduate Students
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Recruitment
2.2. Participants
2.3. Data Collection
2.4. Data Analysis and Trustworthiness
3. Results
3.1. Quality of Quantity
I don’t think more is better necessarily. Less hours with more supervision will be better for quality of hands-on experience. If you can go with your class, one time and see maybe two hours. Have them to talk about what they did. One time go and one time reflection time. How many different things need to talk about. Quality is important. I think supervising is important just rather than somewhere look around text using phone for instance.
Well, one, before students go into the field, they need to be aware of how they should present themselves. Know the expectation, how to dress, how to speak, how to know who their contact is.
It doesn’t matter how many hours, there is no requirement there. The only hours required in PE is the state requirement for student teaching. There is no requirement before those hours. SHAPE wants, when they actually did recognition, they want you to have an experience at the middle school, or high school, and one in elementary. So, you needed to have at least two. I think to really get the students ready for internship they need four or five experiences. They do not all have to be long, but they do have to be different and sequential.
I use the SHAPE America standards because our students with one course could never meet all those APENS (Adapted Physical Education National Standards). Now those APENS standards are built on the old NASPE (The National Association of Sport and Physical Education) standards which were turned into the Shape America standards. So, to me, yeah, it is applying those things they are supposed to be learning. Any interaction they can have, all of our students are planning to interact with others as their profession and they need to have more experience with that. I also think that can help as they get into their internship as they put interviews, adding to their resume, all of that. It is important. I will be honest with you, and most other institutions require twenty hours.
Here this is probably one modification I have made I have done ten because transportation is a problem. And where our school is in a little bit of a desert. I mean there is houses here, and there are residential things here but there is no stores here, no recreation center. They could take the light rail… Students could take the light rail and go downtown but we are not even that close to schools other than the one high school up here where we often do the Special Olympics. Other than that, they can’t even walk to something there is no public transportation. So, I went down to ten hours, because even doing that ten hour hands-on that is probably going to be another 5 h just in transportation. And maybe five hours planning for the transportation by finding someone else who is going and all of that. If we had transportation, or close that they could walk to, then I would probably up it to 15 or twenty hours. Because ten hours is very minimal.
3.2. Need for Diversity in Practical Experiences
So, when you are observing you are still limited because that class is blended with, it may be a regular Physical Education teacher that makes modification for one or two students within a larger class. But it really depends on the school district. So, you are at the mercy of, or the placement of that student what school district and how the school district is set up as far as if they even have Adapted Physical Educator and those Adapted Physical Education classes to really learn at that moment where they are involved in the course, or where they are involved in their student teaching experience.
Large schools, small schools, and diverse school settings in terms of race and ethnicity. All the different experiences. Students broaden their perspective more and more.
I give them a choice and they do their ten hours, but I also make them interview. So, when I used to do 20 h I required 10 h in the school for PE people and I required 10 h in a disability sport or recreation. That wouldn’t work for all our students. So, because they are not all going to be teachers. And the schools are not going or let them in even before the pandemic. So even those 10 h, before they would go out, I would require them to interview at least one person. So, if they were doing like, big feet meat (local Special Olympic) it would probably be Harris (anonymous name, APE K-12 teacher) or one of the other teachers or recreation people or parents who are there. And it is a very relaxed paper because it has more about their experiences and their thoughts how it is going to impact them.
3.3. Practical Experience Pertaining to APE Course
And then just really filling that course with a lot of examples, discussions and hands-on experiences about experience where you are being prepared in your program to help them really see how this is really just very different from regular physical education or regular course that they may teach because there is so many different factors that have to be considered with Adapted Physical Education that’s new.
Hands-on experiences are needed, sometimes it is really hard though to find places where they can observe or work or volunteer and be a part of the school or program where they actually get hands-on experiences. But that’s why we have all those projects in our classes and when we do have a relationship with the school where they can get that we really hold onto it because it is really hard, it is becoming more and more harder to have great experiences where you are talking a student, a college student working and a Pre-K-12 setting where they actually get some hands on experience before they graduate with someone with a disability.
Some of the books still say NASPE. I wish there was still a NASPE. The practicum, I think it needs to be before the practicum. I think there needs to be a practicum in the class. But I think in most of our classes, there needs to be a practicum or a hands-on or an experience. It doesn’t always have to be 10 or 20 h (for practicum requirement). It can be smaller than that, but they have to do something. I think it is more meaningful to students as well. And also, if we want them to be leaders in their field, we need to be helping them build their resume while they are here and not wait until their internship.
It is just so much to teach within that one course which is really limiting because there is not going to be another course that really goes into the specific disabilities… when it comes to Adapted Physical Education maybe they haven’t really considered the details that go into modifying a class for people with disabilities so this can be a completely new area to the students and so we have to not make any assumptions.
But the pre-requisites that prepare students for this class is not actually related to modification as far as disabilities in most of them. So, this may be the first time where they know that they body changes but of course there are so many disabilities… You may modify instructions for various skill levels in your course but then as far as disabilities that is a whole other element. So that’s one of the ways in which it differs as a course because you really have to cover a lot to give them that foundation of knowledge about laws, about the various disabilities, firs the ones that are prevalent in school systems and then just the IEPs, parent involvement, even like the places where instruction start at three years old instead of K-12.
Yeah, and Wellington university (pseudonym) I think is more of a therapeutic rec. It serves that population too. So, I think it just depends and to me that’s what I see as more of a challenge than the students. And the difference with the students is I think our modalities of teaching need to be different. I’m adding more videos, adding shorter amounts of contact, uh, content. I’m doing more checks. (Like in the APE course I now have a quiz for every single chapter. But my quiz might only be 3–5 multiple choice questions. It’s very short.
I have conversations with them all the way through. I give a lot of feedback and frequent feedback. I also give a lot of prompts, but I have always done that. I try to have them be successful and give lots of opportunities for that, but I have always done that. I do a lot of overlap of content So if you missed it the first time, we’ll get it here… And engage them in learning. You can’t force them to learn, you have to engage them to learn. So, I try to do that.
Hands on based learning, I taught back again in turn. They could not do it. Concept came through step by step. The same thing and same direction with hands on kind of concepts. When they go there, they see stuffs, you as the instructor or TA need to be there for sure as the instructor. For instance, I went there Tuesday with students, and back on Tuesday and have conversations with students. And tried to check each detail as possible.
But I think they also need to have time to reflect, and to learn how to reflect. So, I do a lot of that on discussion boards where they need to interact with each other. And it is a very relaxed paper because it has more about their experiences and their thoughts how it is going to impact them. I think I have 5 or 6 questions that are kind of open ended to lead them in that direction and then they have to finish their hours. They have a log of their hours. And they do the interview and then just kind of talk about all of it. And I have to say it is kind of an end of semester assignment even though they are doing it all during the semester the paper is toward the end and I have to say I have walked away with that paper going wow they did learn to think outside the box.
4. Discussion
Limitations and Future Directions
5. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Participant | Position(s) | Years | Faculty Experience | Concentration |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Full Professor (Previous department chair) | 11 | HBCU | APE PETE |
2 | Associate professor | 16 | HBCU | APE PETE |
3 | Adjunct Professor (Retired) (Previous full professor) | 29 | HBCU, PWI | Motor Development PETE |
4 | Full Professor (previous department chair) | 25 | HBCU, PWI | APE PETE |
5 | Associate Professor (Interim department chair) | 10 | HBCU, PWI | Athletic Training Exercise Science |
Subthemes | General Description | Rationale | Indicative Quote and/or Supporting Comments |
---|---|---|---|
Quality of quantity | The quality of practical experience beyond fulfilling requirements | Meaningful experience of student during practical experience | “It is more about how than what” |
The importance of supervision (Basic instructor roles: regular check-ups, constructive feedback, and clear expectations) | To promote learning of students and develop professionalism. | “Less hours with more supervision will be better for quality of hands-on experience” “One time go and one time reflection time” | |
Practicum placement in diverse settings | Developmental engagement into various k-12 settings (e.g., elementary and secondary level) instead of attending in a single place. Importance of the systematic participation in practical experience during four years at college (e.g., APE, method courses, and internships) | “The only hours required in PE is the state requirement for student teaching. There is no requirement before those hours. SHAPE wants, when they actually did recognition, they want you to have an experience at the middle school, or high school, and one in elementary.” | |
Consideration of institutional contexts (e.g., transportation, and regional characteristics such as urban and suburban) | To overcome environmental barriers | “Here this is probably one modification I have made I have done ten because transportation is a problem…If we had transportation, or close that they could walk to, then I would probably up it to 15 or twenty hours” | |
Need for diversity in practical experiences | Available options for practical experience | Instructor’s role to find out the best options in limited circumstances (e.g., regional networks) | “So when you are observing you are still limited because that class is blended with, it may be a regular Physical Education teacher that makes modification for one or two students within a larger class. But it really depends on the school district” |
Complicated situations of practical experience (e.g., influence of class and school district) | Importance of careful choices in advance before students engage in practicum settings | ||
Various places (e.g., school size, different locations, diverse groups in terms of race/ethnicity) | Students can broaden their perspective (toward working with various groups of people with special needs) | “Large schools, small schools, and diverse school settings in terms of race and ethnicity. All the different experiences. Students broaden their perspective more and more” | |
Consideration of major and curriculum of students | Give a choice matching the major (e.g., community-based settings for exercise science major students, k-12 public schools for PETE major students) | “I give them a choice… So because they are not all going to be teachers” | |
Practical experience pertaining to APE course | Practical experience as a supplemental part to strengthen student learning as a part of APE course | Importance of APE course itself APE is introductory and a new process for students in general | “And then just really filling that course with a lot of examples, discussions and hands-on experiences about experience where you are being prepared in your program to help them really see how this is really just very different from regular physical education or regular course that they may teach because there is so many different factors that have to be considered with Adapted Physical Education that’s new” |
Providing quality of practical and/or hands-on experience embedded in APE course | Within given options, students can have practical experience of APE in different ways Students can have meaningful practical learning opportunities throughout the course itself | “Hands-on experiences are needed, sometimes it is really hard though to find places where they can observe or work or volunteer and be a part of the school or program where they actually get hands-on experiences. But that’s why we have all those projects in our classes…” | |
Solution to compensate existing curricular limitations (e.g., unrelatedness of prerequisite course(s) for APE course) | Introductory course required for various curriculums. | “But the pre-requisites that prepare students for this class is not actually related to modification as far as disabilities in most of them. So this may be the first time where they know that they body changes but of course there are so many disabilities” “The connection between institutional context and APE courses because the curriculum of each program will have a different emphasis like therapeutic recreation, education, or rehabilitation”. | |
Continuous communication and frequent feedback | To strengthen student knowledge and critical thinking | “I think they also need to have time to reflect, and to learn how to reflect. So I do a lot of that on discussion boards where they need to interact with each other” |
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Park, S. Faculty Perspective Regarding Practical Experience of Adapted Physical Education for Undergraduate Students. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20, 4282. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20054282
Park S. Faculty Perspective Regarding Practical Experience of Adapted Physical Education for Undergraduate Students. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2023; 20(5):4282. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20054282
Chicago/Turabian StylePark, Seungyeon. 2023. "Faculty Perspective Regarding Practical Experience of Adapted Physical Education for Undergraduate Students" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 20, no. 5: 4282. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20054282
APA StylePark, S. (2023). Faculty Perspective Regarding Practical Experience of Adapted Physical Education for Undergraduate Students. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20(5), 4282. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20054282