The Role of Sport in Physical Education in Finland and the Kurdistan Region of Iraq—Primary School Teachers’ Reflections
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Design
2.2. Description of Participants
2.3. Procedures
2.4. Analyses
3. Results
3.1. The Role of Sport in PE—Finnish Teachers’ Views
3.1.1. Joy and Competence Rather than Sport
In my class they always like to play football and I have to explain it’s not the only thing we need to do, we have to do different things and I have to say we are practicing this activity and next week we are doing different things, […] not always football…and I have to tell them that it is very important to do many things.
In PE activities we do not have competition, we need to learn that everyone can be good at sport, and you do not need to be the best. But for them [the students] it is difficult because there is always someone who wants to be the first and the best, for example when they run or …. If we play football, we don’t keep scoring, it’s just time to have fun and enjoy.
We practice various ball tricks. There are easier moves that everyone can do, but there are also more challenging ones that only a quarter of the group can perform. Then there might be an easier move again that everyone can do. The goal is to structure the class in such a way that provides opportunities for success, and if there is failure, students can overcome it.
It doesn’t always have to involve keeping score or tallying points, but it allows students to learn about both winning and losing in a safe environment. I consider it crucial because many children struggle with handling feelings of loss or disappointment, and physical education provides a suitable setting to experience both success and failure.
All of them are really motivated in sports, and it’s great to teach those classes. One challenge is managing students’ competitiveness and maintaining a balance. Sometimes the competitive nature of some students can overshadow others, so finding that balance can be a challenge.
3.1.2. Sport and Curriculum
We learn the rules of games, fair play, how to handle winning and losing. These are essential objectives, along with promoting teamwork and supporting classmates while working together. It’s not so much about emphasising specific sports, but rather acquiring those skills through different activities, including different sports.
The change that occurred a few years ago, moving away from a focus solely on specific sports, has been positive. Although sports are still included, and students learn various skills through them, the emphasis is no longer solely on sports, sports, and more sports, which may have been the trend in physical education for decades.
Of course, there’s also the fact that many of the children who engage in competitive sports in their free time are naturally strong in physical education as well. And many of those differences in skill levels come through that, and it may distort the assessment because then it’s not caused by the school itself.
It is very important to make the physical activity system in the whole school, and moving is part of the school culture and students’ social networking. Because they are friends, and they play, and they could make new friends through physical activities. It is like a way to socialize.
3.1.3. Status of Sports in Society
Finland has been known internationally for endurance sports, and it has likely influenced physical education in the past. In recent years or decades, there has been a strong emphasis on various team sports, where Finland has approached or reached the top globally, and that has also had a significant impact on physical education.
I think Finnish society wants to be healthy, and we are quite healthy. In the last ten years, the country has invested a lot of money in physical education through organizing different programs such as the program called ‘Access and Permission to Move,’…Generally, I believe everybody respects physical education as much as other subjects, or even more. I’m not sure why, but it might be due to our history and our close connection to Nature. I also have a fondness for history.
3.1.4. Prerequisites for Physical Activities and Sport
Some teachers have less motivation, and it is because of access to facilities, so if the facilities are closed or accessible, it impacts the teachers’ motivation. If the teacher does not do sport, it also impacts his or her motivation for teaching PE.
3.2. The Role of Sport in PE—The KRI Teachers’ Views
3.2.1. Sport as an Aim in PE
For example, I had a player who could do high jump on cement, so I took him to the institute and brought him sponge mats to practice with. Then he came second at the level of high school. I invest more focus and time in such students to support them and some of them have become players in [name] Sports Club.
I take the students to the other side where I first explain the subject theoretically to them by drawing the technique on the board and when it is rainy, I use a data show. They will do pole vault theoretically through the steps I show them, but there is no actual place to put it into practice. The students cannot feel the sport authentically in this way due to not having actual practice, they only saw the game on TV and of course not all of them.
3.2.2. Teacher as a Model and Leader of Sport
Our student, when he sees there is no supervision, he tends to be naughty or stops exercising sports unlike their [Finnish] students, who continue doing the exercises even if the teacher is not right there. Getting students to assume such roles in a PE class is very difficult for me.
3.2.3. Sport Raising Your Status
We offer students social advice, as their families usually tell them not to do sports as their level will drop both physically and academically. They tell them not to play football as they may fall. Many times, we open sports courses and ask the students’ parents to come and see how we teach their kids, and this makes them encourage their kids to do sports.
3.2.4. PE Is Not Only Sports
We develop the physical aspect in students then we move to develop their skills, so the priority is for bodies then their skills. If I develop their physical aspect, their learning skills will be easier. For example, we have students whose way of walking is imbalanced, we must show them how to walk, how to use their hands with their feet and we show them how to develop their fitness, so we are concerned with their bodies and skills.
The last three years must be taken more seriously in teaching physical education with a view to military recruitment so that the students know that the subject of physical education has its own aspects as other subjects have, and it is not only football. If you do not employ such methods in your teaching, you will not be a successful teacher.
4. Discussion
5. Strengths and Limitations of the Study
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Subcategories | Final Categories |
---|---|
Making classmates enjoy Special PE class for goal-oriented students Balancing with sporty students’ competitiveness and joy of movement Competition as a tool Adapt PE according to the students’ needs Joy of movement Encouraging the less active to participate Competitive sport is different Physical activities for joy outside of PE lessons Everyone can be good Avoiding comparison Use sport talent and skills to help classmates Create opportunities for success Learning from failures | Joy and Competence Rather Than Sport |
Social goals Many different activities in the curriculum Broad curriculum Lack of focus on specific sports Evaluation criteria Swimming is the only sport in the curriculum Focusing on motor skills, not specific sports Teamwork Supporting classmates Sports have been trending in PE for decades Change away from specific sports has been positive | Sport and Curriculum |
Traditional physical activities National teams’ example National special sports Finns are sporting oriented and value PA Collaboration with sports clubs Changes in national sport culture Sport trends in society are present in PE | Status of Sports in Society |
Knowledge and skills Teachers’ attitude Showing context for skills Example of active person | Prerequisites for Physical Activities and Sport |
Subcategories | Final Categories |
---|---|
Finding a suitable sport for student Practice is important Support students to train Importance of sport Sport practice supports life Regulations of sport Lack of real sport facilities Teaching knowledge of sports Techniques of sports Video replacing authentic sport facilities | Sport as an Aim in PE |
Teacher’s example leading to the sport Follow the teacher Students’ freedom is difficult to control Students need control Leading the lesson is tiring | Teacher as a Model and Leader of the Sport |
Show talent in championships Prominent students are admired Sport success helps students Proud of sport Sport leading to the college of PE More focus on prominent students | Sport Raising Your Status |
PE should be entertainment at first and more serious later PE prepares for military recruitment Not only football Special methods Developing physical bodies and skills Cooperation with classmates Take account physical differences Grouping according to the level and social aspects Fair play Learning new skills Suitable freedom | PE Is Not Only Sports |
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Kalari, J.; Mohammed, W.A.; Makrooni, G.; Lagestad, P. The Role of Sport in Physical Education in Finland and the Kurdistan Region of Iraq—Primary School Teachers’ Reflections. Educ. Sci. 2025, 15, 919. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15070919
Kalari J, Mohammed WA, Makrooni G, Lagestad P. The Role of Sport in Physical Education in Finland and the Kurdistan Region of Iraq—Primary School Teachers’ Reflections. Education Sciences. 2025; 15(7):919. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15070919
Chicago/Turabian StyleKalari, Joonas, Warhel Asim Mohammed, Golaleh Makrooni, and Pål Lagestad. 2025. "The Role of Sport in Physical Education in Finland and the Kurdistan Region of Iraq—Primary School Teachers’ Reflections" Education Sciences 15, no. 7: 919. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15070919
APA StyleKalari, J., Mohammed, W. A., Makrooni, G., & Lagestad, P. (2025). The Role of Sport in Physical Education in Finland and the Kurdistan Region of Iraq—Primary School Teachers’ Reflections. Education Sciences, 15(7), 919. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15070919