Editorial

IF 0.1 Q4 HOSPITALITY, LEISURE, SPORT & TOURISM International Sports Studies Pub Date : 2020-12-21 DOI:10.30819/iss.42-2.01
J. Saunders
{"title":"Editorial","authors":"J. Saunders","doi":"10.30819/iss.42-2.01","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"\n In my last editorial I was contemplating living the new and unexpected experience of\nlife with Covid 19. Six months ago, was a time for contemplation. We were all entering\ninto an event of major historical significance. The world has experienced epidemics\nbefore, and we had only to turn to the works of writers such as Camus to realise how\nrecurrent human behaviour is. We tend so often to be caught by surprise despite the\nlessons that are so readily available to us through reference to history. The Spanish ‘flu\nepidemic of 1919 was the obvious benchmark to which we could turn. Following hot\non the heels of the Great War of 1914-1918 it was responsible for more casualties than\noccurred in the war to end all wars (50 million). It infected 500 million people worldwide.\nAfter just over ten months we are a long, long way from those sorts of figures. As\nof 12th November, 51,975,458 case of infection have been reported. Deaths attributed\nto the virus number 1,281,309 worldwide.\n \n \nOf course, what makes Covid 19 so significant is not simply that it should have\nhappened, but that it is the first pandemic in this era of globalisation which we have\nentered only comparatively recently. Some might remember the SARS epidemic which\naffected mainly people in Asia. As indicated by its name, severe acute respiratory\nsyndrome (SARS-CoV-2), it was very similar initially in its effects. Yet, after first\nemerging in 2002, it was eradicated less than two years later. It seems that this was\nachieved largely by what has been called simple public health measures. This involved\n“testing people with symptoms (fever and respiratory problems), isolating and\nquarantining suspected cases, and restricting travel.” These same measures of course\nhave been implemented in most countries following the virus’ spread to Italy early in\n2020. However, the fact that different nations have responded differently and also\nexperienced very different outcomes should be of considerable interest as we consider\nthe whole concept of a global threat and global responses. The ten worst affected\ncountries currently are in order:\n \n \nContry; Confirmed Cases; Deaths\nUnited States; 10,460,302; 244,421\nIndia; 8,684,039; 128,165\nBrazil; 5,749,007; 163,406\nFrance; 1,865,538; 42,535\nRussia; 1,836,960; 31,593\nSpain; 1,417,709; 40,105\nArgentina; 1,273,343; 34,531\nUnited Kingdom; 1,256,725; 50,365\nColombia; 1,165,326; 33,312\nItaly; 1,028,424; 42,953\n \n \n\n\nThey are dominated by the advanced economies of the northern hemisphere. The\ncountries who have previously experienced the SARS epidemic in Asia have fared\ncomparatively lightly. Bearing in mind that statistics of this nature may not be strictly\ncomparable given variation in the criteria used and the methods of sourcing and\ncollecting this information, it is still interesting to hypothesise why outcomes can differ\nso much. Explanations might include reference to the environments in which people\nlive – physical space, climate and availability of sophisticated health care systems to\nname a few – or they might dwell on the culture of those involved, their willingness to\nfollow instructions imposed upon them, the importance of competing objectives that might make prioritising health and physical wellness less of a priority. Whatever the\ncase, satisfactory explanations are more likely to involve some interactions involving\nmeasures of both the individuals and the environments within which they live.\n\nAny attempt to explain or understand human behaviour needs to consider a variety of\nfactors and knowing how to take account of them is an important part of the skill base\nthat scholars of international and comparative studies bring with them. Such skills and\nknowledge are more important in a globalised world than they have ever been. Yet such\nskills may be becoming harder to achieve, precisely because of some of the effects of\nprocesses associated with globalisation. I would recommend to you a recent\ndocumentary produced by Netflix and widely available on YouTube. “The Social\nDilemma” is an examination of the use of social media and in particular focuses on the\nrelationship between the growing addiction amongst young people to the use of\nsmartphones and, specifically their social media programmes, and the rising levels of\nconcern about deteriorating mental health and wellbeing among the world’s youth. It\ndraws a relationship between the psychological disorder of narcissism and the failure\nof phone obsessed young people to experience real human to human interaction, with a\nrelated increase in aggressive bullying and dysfunctional behaviour. Thus, the results\nof experiencing interactions and personal validation through the proxy world of social\nmedia, rather than face to face, is a dehumanisation of the individual and leads to a\ndistorted experience of the world in simple dichotomies of a single view, right or wrong.\nSo, whatever the continuing effects of the pandemic, as these continue to unfold, it will\nbe important that we continue to build our understanding of other people in their own\nworlds. We need to avoid the trap of believing that our own world is the only world and\nthe right world. However smart artificial intelligence becomes, a screen is only two\ndimensional and it is the extra dimensions that enable us to grow as humans and cope\nwith the complexity and challenges of our own unique worlds. One of the less helpful\ntrends of our globalised digitised world, has been the pursuit and glorification of the\ncult of celebrity. One of the difficulties of that celebrity status is it is frequently awarded\non the basis of undeserving and irrelevant characteristics such as, acting ability, physical\nbeauty or sporting reputation. Yet many seem to feel that this status entitles them to\npontificate or attempt to influence others in areas that have nothing to do with their\nexpertise. Ricky Gervais, in his chairing of the 2020 golden globes award, brought a\nrefreshing dose of reality in advising the celebrities who were to receive awards:\n\n \nYou are in no position to lecture the public about anything. You know\nnothing about the real world. Most of you spent less time in school than Greta\nThunberg. So, if you win, come up accept your little award. Thank your agent\nand your God and **** off. OK?\n\n \nIt is in that spirit of willingness to learn from the work of a range of colleagues\nworking in a range of places and professional situations around the world, I commend\nto you the contributions to be found in the following pages. To start the ball rolling, we\nhave a report from Hairui Liu, Wei Shen and Peter Hastie on the application of a\ncurriculum model which was developed in the US and has since gained some popularity\nin a number of settings around the world. The origins of sport education came from a\nrealisation that, in too many situations, physical education had failed to excite the same\ndegree of enthusiasm among school pupils as could often be observed when they\ninvolved themselves in sport. The model thus extends the skill/technique focus which\nis found in many traditional physical education settings, to include more of the\ndimensions of sport – formal competition, affiliation, festivity experienced over a\nseason. They concluded that, within this Chinese university context, the students\nachieved a higher level of performance and more enthusiastic engagement when the\nmodel was adopted as a basis for their learning.\n\n \nOur second article moves from an education setting to a contemporary sport science\nframework, the world of professional sport and one of the higher levels of competition\nin the world – the English Championship. Rhys Carr, Rich Mullen and Morgan\nWilliams monitored the running intensity of players throughout a season. In particular\nthey questioned the demands for high intensity running when playing in a 4-4-2\nformation and implementing a high press strategy, such as adopted by Liverpool in their\nhighly successful 2019 English Premiership season. They concluded that, for players in\nthe centre forward and wide midfield positions, the demands created were impossible\nto maintain for an entire match. They were then able to draw out some practical and\ntactical implications for managers and their support staff, relating to substitution\nstrategy and the physical match preparation of players in these positions and with these\nstrategic responsibilities.\n\n \nOur third article involves an exploration of the perpetual discomfort many of us\nfeel as educators when we compare the practice of sport against the ideals we hold for\nit. As professionals in the field, many of us are driven by our belief in what sport can\noffer. Yet the modern commodification of sport, coupled with the excessive need to win\nas a motive that exceeds all others, consistently produces behaviours and outcomes\nwhich we seek to disassociate from our professional practices. The article by Irantzu\nIbanez, Ana Zuazagoitia, Ibon Echeazarra, Luis Maria Zulaika and Iker Ros is set in the\ncontext of the Basque region of Spain and explores the values held by students in their\npre-service training with regard to the practice of extracurricular sport. The students\nshow an awareness of the mismatch between their ideals of extracurricular sport as an\neducational experience and the influence on current practices that comes from the way\nin which sport is conducted in the society at large. The authors conclude with a plea for\ngreater alignment between the practice of sport in schools and teh educational values\nthat should guide it.\n\n \nOur final contribution is from South Africa where Lesego Phetlhe, Heather Morris-\nEyton and Alliance Kubayi report on the concerns of football (soccer) coaches in Guateng\nprovince. It is clear that these coaches, in common with others around the world, suffer\na degree of stress in their chosen occupation. The sources of this stress are to be found\nin the nature of the complex tasks they are expected to manage, as well as in the always\nchallenging job of m","PeriodicalId":40315,"journal":{"name":"International Sports Studies","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.1000,"publicationDate":"2020-12-21","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"International Sports Studies","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.30819/iss.42-2.01","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"HOSPITALITY, LEISURE, SPORT & TOURISM","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

In my last editorial I was contemplating living the new and unexpected experience of life with Covid 19. Six months ago, was a time for contemplation. We were all entering into an event of major historical significance. The world has experienced epidemics before, and we had only to turn to the works of writers such as Camus to realise how recurrent human behaviour is. We tend so often to be caught by surprise despite the lessons that are so readily available to us through reference to history. The Spanish ‘flu epidemic of 1919 was the obvious benchmark to which we could turn. Following hot on the heels of the Great War of 1914-1918 it was responsible for more casualties than occurred in the war to end all wars (50 million). It infected 500 million people worldwide. After just over ten months we are a long, long way from those sorts of figures. As of 12th November, 51,975,458 case of infection have been reported. Deaths attributed to the virus number 1,281,309 worldwide. Of course, what makes Covid 19 so significant is not simply that it should have happened, but that it is the first pandemic in this era of globalisation which we have entered only comparatively recently. Some might remember the SARS epidemic which affected mainly people in Asia. As indicated by its name, severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS-CoV-2), it was very similar initially in its effects. Yet, after first emerging in 2002, it was eradicated less than two years later. It seems that this was achieved largely by what has been called simple public health measures. This involved “testing people with symptoms (fever and respiratory problems), isolating and quarantining suspected cases, and restricting travel.” These same measures of course have been implemented in most countries following the virus’ spread to Italy early in 2020. However, the fact that different nations have responded differently and also experienced very different outcomes should be of considerable interest as we consider the whole concept of a global threat and global responses. The ten worst affected countries currently are in order: Contry; Confirmed Cases; Deaths United States; 10,460,302; 244,421 India; 8,684,039; 128,165 Brazil; 5,749,007; 163,406 France; 1,865,538; 42,535 Russia; 1,836,960; 31,593 Spain; 1,417,709; 40,105 Argentina; 1,273,343; 34,531 United Kingdom; 1,256,725; 50,365 Colombia; 1,165,326; 33,312 Italy; 1,028,424; 42,953 They are dominated by the advanced economies of the northern hemisphere. The countries who have previously experienced the SARS epidemic in Asia have fared comparatively lightly. Bearing in mind that statistics of this nature may not be strictly comparable given variation in the criteria used and the methods of sourcing and collecting this information, it is still interesting to hypothesise why outcomes can differ so much. Explanations might include reference to the environments in which people live – physical space, climate and availability of sophisticated health care systems to name a few – or they might dwell on the culture of those involved, their willingness to follow instructions imposed upon them, the importance of competing objectives that might make prioritising health and physical wellness less of a priority. Whatever the case, satisfactory explanations are more likely to involve some interactions involving measures of both the individuals and the environments within which they live. Any attempt to explain or understand human behaviour needs to consider a variety of factors and knowing how to take account of them is an important part of the skill base that scholars of international and comparative studies bring with them. Such skills and knowledge are more important in a globalised world than they have ever been. Yet such skills may be becoming harder to achieve, precisely because of some of the effects of processes associated with globalisation. I would recommend to you a recent documentary produced by Netflix and widely available on YouTube. “The Social Dilemma” is an examination of the use of social media and in particular focuses on the relationship between the growing addiction amongst young people to the use of smartphones and, specifically their social media programmes, and the rising levels of concern about deteriorating mental health and wellbeing among the world’s youth. It draws a relationship between the psychological disorder of narcissism and the failure of phone obsessed young people to experience real human to human interaction, with a related increase in aggressive bullying and dysfunctional behaviour. Thus, the results of experiencing interactions and personal validation through the proxy world of social media, rather than face to face, is a dehumanisation of the individual and leads to a distorted experience of the world in simple dichotomies of a single view, right or wrong. So, whatever the continuing effects of the pandemic, as these continue to unfold, it will be important that we continue to build our understanding of other people in their own worlds. We need to avoid the trap of believing that our own world is the only world and the right world. However smart artificial intelligence becomes, a screen is only two dimensional and it is the extra dimensions that enable us to grow as humans and cope with the complexity and challenges of our own unique worlds. One of the less helpful trends of our globalised digitised world, has been the pursuit and glorification of the cult of celebrity. One of the difficulties of that celebrity status is it is frequently awarded on the basis of undeserving and irrelevant characteristics such as, acting ability, physical beauty or sporting reputation. Yet many seem to feel that this status entitles them to pontificate or attempt to influence others in areas that have nothing to do with their expertise. Ricky Gervais, in his chairing of the 2020 golden globes award, brought a refreshing dose of reality in advising the celebrities who were to receive awards: You are in no position to lecture the public about anything. You know nothing about the real world. Most of you spent less time in school than Greta Thunberg. So, if you win, come up accept your little award. Thank your agent and your God and **** off. OK? It is in that spirit of willingness to learn from the work of a range of colleagues working in a range of places and professional situations around the world, I commend to you the contributions to be found in the following pages. To start the ball rolling, we have a report from Hairui Liu, Wei Shen and Peter Hastie on the application of a curriculum model which was developed in the US and has since gained some popularity in a number of settings around the world. The origins of sport education came from a realisation that, in too many situations, physical education had failed to excite the same degree of enthusiasm among school pupils as could often be observed when they involved themselves in sport. The model thus extends the skill/technique focus which is found in many traditional physical education settings, to include more of the dimensions of sport – formal competition, affiliation, festivity experienced over a season. They concluded that, within this Chinese university context, the students achieved a higher level of performance and more enthusiastic engagement when the model was adopted as a basis for their learning. Our second article moves from an education setting to a contemporary sport science framework, the world of professional sport and one of the higher levels of competition in the world – the English Championship. Rhys Carr, Rich Mullen and Morgan Williams monitored the running intensity of players throughout a season. In particular they questioned the demands for high intensity running when playing in a 4-4-2 formation and implementing a high press strategy, such as adopted by Liverpool in their highly successful 2019 English Premiership season. They concluded that, for players in the centre forward and wide midfield positions, the demands created were impossible to maintain for an entire match. They were then able to draw out some practical and tactical implications for managers and their support staff, relating to substitution strategy and the physical match preparation of players in these positions and with these strategic responsibilities. Our third article involves an exploration of the perpetual discomfort many of us feel as educators when we compare the practice of sport against the ideals we hold for it. As professionals in the field, many of us are driven by our belief in what sport can offer. Yet the modern commodification of sport, coupled with the excessive need to win as a motive that exceeds all others, consistently produces behaviours and outcomes which we seek to disassociate from our professional practices. The article by Irantzu Ibanez, Ana Zuazagoitia, Ibon Echeazarra, Luis Maria Zulaika and Iker Ros is set in the context of the Basque region of Spain and explores the values held by students in their pre-service training with regard to the practice of extracurricular sport. The students show an awareness of the mismatch between their ideals of extracurricular sport as an educational experience and the influence on current practices that comes from the way in which sport is conducted in the society at large. The authors conclude with a plea for greater alignment between the practice of sport in schools and teh educational values that should guide it. Our final contribution is from South Africa where Lesego Phetlhe, Heather Morris- Eyton and Alliance Kubayi report on the concerns of football (soccer) coaches in Guateng province. It is clear that these coaches, in common with others around the world, suffer a degree of stress in their chosen occupation. The sources of this stress are to be found in the nature of the complex tasks they are expected to manage, as well as in the always challenging job of m
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在我的上一篇社论中,我正在考虑新冠肺炎带来的意想不到的新生活体验。六个月前,是沉思的时候。我们都在参与一个具有重大历史意义的事件。世界上以前也经历过流行病,我们只需要看看加缪等作家的作品,就能意识到人类行为是如何反复出现的。尽管我们可以从历史中很容易得到一些教训,但我们往往还是会感到惊讶。1919年西班牙的流感大流行显然是我们可以参照的基准。在1914-1918年的第一次世界大战之后,它造成的伤亡人数超过了所有战争的伤亡人数(5000万)。它感染了全世界5亿人。仅仅过了10个月,我们离这些数字还有很长的路要走。截至11月12日,已报告51,975,458例感染。全球死于该病毒的人数为1,281,309人。当然,Covid - 19之所以如此重要,不仅仅是因为它应该发生,而是因为它是我们刚刚进入这个全球化时代的第一次大流行。有些人可能还记得主要影响亚洲人的非典疫情。正如其名称严重急性呼吸系统综合征(SARS-CoV-2)所示,它最初的影响非常相似。然而,在2002年首次出现后,不到两年就被消灭了。这似乎主要是通过所谓的简单公共卫生措施实现的。这包括“对有症状(发烧和呼吸系统问题)的人进行检测,隔离和检疫疑似病例,以及限制旅行。”当然,在2020年初该病毒传播到意大利之后,大多数国家都采取了同样的措施。然而,在我们考虑全球威胁和全球反应的整个概念时,不同国家做出了不同的反应,也经历了非常不同的结果,这一事实应该引起我们相当大的兴趣。目前受影响最严重的十个国家依次为:国家;确诊病例;DeathsUnited状态;10460302;244421年印度;8684039;128165年巴西;5749007;163406年法国;1865538;42535年,俄罗斯;1836960;31593年西班牙;1417709;40105年阿根廷;1273343;34531年英国;1256725;50365年哥伦比亚;1165326;33312年意大利;1028424;42,953 .它们由北半球的发达经济体主导。此前在亚洲经历过SARS疫情的国家受到的影响相对较轻。考虑到使用的标准和获取和收集这些信息的方法的差异,这种性质的统计数据可能不具有严格的可比性,假设为什么结果会有如此大的差异仍然很有趣。解释可能包括参考人们所处的环境——物理空间、气候和复杂的医疗保健系统的可用性等等——或者他们可能会详述相关人员的文化,他们是否愿意遵循强加给他们的指示,相互竞争的目标的重要性,这些目标可能会使优先考虑健康和身体健康不那么重要。无论如何,令人满意的解释更有可能涉及到个人和他们所处环境的相互作用。任何解释或理解人类行为的尝试都需要考虑各种因素,知道如何考虑这些因素是国际和比较研究学者所具备的技能基础的重要组成部分。在一个全球化的世界里,这些技能和知识比以往任何时候都更加重要。然而,正是由于全球化进程的一些影响,这些技能可能正变得越来越难以获得。我向你推荐一部最近由Netflix制作的纪录片,它在YouTube上随处可见。《社会困境》是对社交媒体使用情况的考察,尤其关注年轻人对智能手机的使用日益上瘾,特别是他们的社交媒体节目,以及对世界青年心理健康和福祉恶化的日益关注之间的关系。它将自恋的心理障碍与沉迷于手机的年轻人无法体验真正的人与人之间的互动联系起来,并由此导致攻击性欺凌和功能失调行为的增加。因此,通过社交媒体的代理世界体验互动和个人验证的结果,而不是面对面,是对个人的非人性化,并导致在单一观点的简单二分法中扭曲了对世界的体验,对或错。因此,无论这场大流行的持续影响如何,随着这些影响的继续显现,我们继续在自己的世界中建立对其他人的理解将是很重要的。 我们需要避免陷入这样的陷阱:认为我们自己的世界是唯一的世界,是正确的世界。无论人工智能变得多么智能,屏幕都只是二维的,正是这些额外的维度使我们能够成长为人类,并应对我们自己独特世界的复杂性和挑战。在我们这个全球化的数字化世界里,对名人崇拜的追求和美化是一个不太有益的趋势。名人地位的困难之一是,它经常是基于不值得的和无关的特征,如演技、身体美或运动声誉。然而,许多人似乎觉得,这种地位使他们有资格在与他们的专业知识无关的领域发表意见或试图影响他人。瑞奇·热维斯(Ricky Gervais)在主持2020年金球奖(golden globes)颁奖典礼时,给即将领奖的明星们提出了令人耳目一新的现实建议:你们没有资格向公众说教任何事情。你对现实世界一无所知。你们大多数人在学校的时间比GretaThunberg还少。所以,如果你赢了,上来接受你的小奖品。感谢你的代理人和上帝,然后****离开。好吗?正是本着这种愿意向在世界各地不同地方和不同专业情况下工作的同事学习的精神,我向你们赞扬以下几页所作的贡献。首先,我们请到了来自刘海瑞、沈伟和Peter Hastie的关于课程模式应用的报告,这种模式起源于美国,并在世界各地的许多地方得到了普及。体育教育的起源来自于这样一种认识:在很多情况下,体育教育未能激发学生参与体育运动时所能看到的同样程度的热情。因此,该模型扩展了在许多传统体育教育环境中发现的技能/技术重点,以包括更多的体育维度-正式竞争,从属关系,整个赛季的节日体验。他们得出的结论是,在中国的大学环境中,当采用这种模式作为他们学习的基础时,学生们的表现水平更高,参与的积极性也更高。我们的第二篇文章从教育环境转移到当代体育科学框架,职业体育的世界和世界上更高水平的比赛之一-英格兰锦标赛。里斯·卡尔、里奇·马伦和摩根·威廉姆斯在整个赛季中监测了球员的跑步强度。他们特别质疑在4-4-2阵型中对高强度跑动的要求,以及实施高压力战术,就像利物浦在2019赛季取得巨大成功的英超联赛中所采用的那样。他们的结论是,对于处于中锋和中场边路位置的球员来说,所产生的需求不可能在整场比赛中维持。然后,他们能够为经理和他们的支持人员提供一些实际和战术上的启示,涉及换人策略和球员在这些位置上的身体准备以及这些战略责任。我们的第三篇文章探讨了作为教育工作者,当我们将体育运动的实践与我们所坚持的理想进行比较时,我们中的许多人所感到的永恒的不适。作为该领域的专业人士,我们中的许多人都被我们对体育所能提供的东西的信念所驱使。然而,现代体育的商品化,再加上对胜利的过度需求,这一动机超过了所有其他动机,不断产生我们试图与我们的专业实践分离的行为和结果。这篇由IrantzuIbanez、Ana Zuazagoitia、Ibon Echeazarra、Luis Maria Zulaika和Iker Ros撰写的文章以西班牙巴斯克地区为背景,探讨了学生在职前培训中关于课外运动实践的价值观。学生们意识到,他们对课外体育作为一种教育体验的理想与体育在整个社会中进行的方式对当前实践的影响之间存在不匹配。作者最后呼吁在学校的体育实践和指导它的教育价值观之间建立更大的一致性。我们的最后一篇报道来自南非,Lesego phetlthe、Heather Morris-Eyton和Alliance Kubayi报道了广东省足球教练的担忧。很明显,这些教练和世界各地的其他人一样,在他们选择的职业中承受着一定程度的压力。这种压力的来源既在于他们要处理的复杂任务的性质,也在于我的工作总是充满挑战
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来源期刊
International Sports Studies
International Sports Studies HOSPITALITY, LEISURE, SPORT & TOURISM-
CiteScore
1.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
2
期刊介绍: International Sports Studies (ISS) is a scholarly journal in the field of physical education and sport with a unique focus. Its aim is to advance understanding and communication between members of the global community who share a professional, personal or scholarly interest in the state and development of physical education and sport around the world. International Sports Studies (ISS) is today without paradigmatic prejudice and reflects an eclectic approach to the task of understanding physical education and sport in the contemporary world. It asks only that its contributors can add to knowledge about international physical education and sport studies through studies involving comparisons between regional, national and international settings or by providing unique insights into specific national and local phenomena which contribute to an understanding that can be shared across as well as within national borders.
期刊最新文献
Quality Physical Education Perceptions Among PE Professionals: an Exploratory Factor Analysis Understanding Quality Physical Education from the Perspective of Asian PE Professionals The Perception of Quality Physical Education in China Voices from PE Professionals in Mindanao: Expectations Underlying Quality Physical Education Development Quality Physical Education (QPE) Measurement Tool Development
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