在整个AC:HPE中嵌入批判性调查方法,以支持青春期女孩参与传统上男性化的体育运动

IF 1.5 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Learning Communities-International Journal of Learning in Social Contexts Pub Date : 2017-11-01 DOI:10.18793/LCJ2017.21.11
Nadia Bevan, Jennifer Fane
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As schools are a setting in which adolescents spend a significant amount of their time, and whose curricular mandate is to engage young people in sport and physical activity, investigation into high school settings and their impact on female sport participation in TMS is timely. This paper explores the role in which embedding a critical inquiry approach to sport and the gendered nature of sport participation across the national Australian Curriculum Health and Physical Education (AC:HPE) (Australian Curriculum Assessment and Reporting Authority, 2013) learning area may support girls’ continued sport participation throughout their high school years. It reports on a study which investigated adolescent girls’ (n=34) experiences of participation in the TMS of soccer, cricket, and Australian Football. Thematic analysis of the data uncovered key themes relating to the role of schools in enabling or creating barriers for female sport participation. Key themes evident within the data, such as gendered norms and expectations, opportunities for participation, and the under representation of women in TMS are discussed in relation to key ideas embedded in the AC:HPE curriculum (Australian Curriculum Assessment and Reporting Authority, 2013). The findings suggest ways in which barriers to female sport participation can be challenged using critical inquiry approaches embedded in the AC:HPE curriculum (Australian Curriculum Assessment and Reporting Authority, 2013) and the school and learning environment. Introduction Adolescence is a time when a significant amount of girls drop out of sports or discontinue physical activity (Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS), 2011; Gavin, Mcbrearty & Harvey, 2013). Schools play a critical role in enabling or disabling children and youth’s sport participation 139 Learning Communities | Special Issue: 2017 30th AChPER International Conference | Number 21 – November 2017 through both the culture of the school and in the choices offered for male and female sport participation (Mitchell, Gray & Inchley, 2015). While women and girls participate in a range of physical activity and sports, the rates of uptake for female adolescents into Traditionally Masculinised Sports (TMS) in Australia has currently overtaken the rates of uptake of female adolescents in physical activities and sports considered traditionally feminine and/or gender neutral (ABS, 2011). As such, TMS may offer a vehicle to continue or increase adolescent females’ sport participation at a time where their participation continues to be significantly lower than that of their male peers. Offering choices for girls to participate in TMS in schools and community athletic/sporting clubs is a key factor for supporting female adolescent sport participation (Craike, Symons & Zimmermann, 2009; Mitchell, et al., 2015). Less attention has been given to how breaking down social and cultural barriers, both real and perceived, towards girls’ participation in TMS may support its continued and increased uptake. This paper reports on a study that investigated the experience of 34 adolescent females who were current participants in a TMS to better understand mechanisms and factors that were supportive, or unsupportive, of their sporting participation. The data highlighted that the role of schools and teachers featured prominently in participants’ experiences, though frequently as a barrier or unsupportive factor. Despite that, while similar findings have been found in previous Australian and international studies (Eime et al., 2013; Flintoff & Scraton, 2001; Garrett, 2010), scant attention has been given to how the curriculum itself may be a tool in supporting girls in the uptake and continuation of sport and physical activity both within and outside school contexts. A prominent feature of the national Australian Curriculum Health and Physical Education (AC:HPE) (Australian Curriculum Assessment and Reporting Authority, 2013) learning area is the inclusion of a critical inquiry approach as a key idea, an approach which seeks to give students opportunities to “critically analyse and critically evaluate contextual factors that influence decision-making, behaviours and actions, and explore inclusiveness, power inequalities, assumptions, diversity and social justice” (Australian Curriculum Assessment and Reporting Authority, 2013, retreived from: http://www.australiancurriculum.edu.au/ health-and-physical-education/key-ideas). While the importance of embedding critical inquiry approaches in physical and sport education is far from new (Laker, 2002; Siedentop, 1994; Tinning, 2002), the continuation of higher rates of attrition from physical education, physical activity and sport of female adolescents in comparison with their male peers reinforces the need for critical inquiry approaches to be a key strategy for student engagement within the new AC:HPE curriculum (Australian Curriculum Assessment and Reporting Authority, 2013). As the literature has identified that cultural and social factors impact significantly on adolescent sport participation (see for example Hively & El-Alayli, 2014; Slater & Tiggemann, 2010; Slater & Tiggemann, 2011), critical inquiry approaches may offer a vehicle for engaging students in critically analysing their own and other’s beliefs, behaviours, and practices in relation to the ways in which sport and physical activity participation is highly gendered. The findings of the study are discussed in relation to the rationale, aim, and key ideas of the AC:HPE (Australian Curriculum Assessment and Reporting Authority, 2013) and how critical inquiry approaches may offer avenues for challenging real and perceived barriers to female participation in TMS, both within schools and wider social settings. Challenging social and cultural norms which negatively impact on the sport and physical activity participation of children and youth is a shared aim of both the national curriculum and national/international guidelines, frameworks, and organisations relating to and involving sport. As such, capitalising on opportunities to interrupt and dismantle barriers and challenge harmful gendered social norms is essential to the work of HPE teachers and schools. 140 Embedding a critical inquiry approach across the AC:HPE to support adolescent girls in participating in traditionally masculinised sport Nadia Bevan & Jennifer Fane Literature review While the increase in female participation over the past decade has been statistically significant; males are consistently more likely to play soccer, cricket and football (ABS, 2011). There are a multitude of reasons for this discrepancy including physical, psychological, environmental, time-based, inter-personal, programming, access and opportunity barriers (Johnstone & Millar, 2012). Another important reason for this gendered discrepancy in sport participation is the way in which sport is typically embedded within the development of, and current social constructions of masculinity (Craike et al., 2009; Klomsten Marsh & Skaalvik, 2005; Velija & Malcolm, 2009). Conversely, sport, and specifically traditionally non-feminised sport, does not conform to the gender ideology of femininity, which in many ways opposes participation in sports, specifically TMS (Dodge & Lambert, 2009; Gavin et al., 2013; Leavy, Gnong & Ross, 2009). A substantial amount of research (see Alley & Hicks, 2005; Berger, O’Reilly, Parent, Seguin & Hernandez, 2008; Cooky, 2009), has demonstrated that social constructs significantly impact the activities boys and girls and women and men choose or are able to play, and more specifically, which sports fall within the socially constructed acceptability of feminine and masculine. Leavy, Gnong and Ross argue that “women have been taught that there are social rewards for conformity to the cultural standard of femininity” (2009, p. 280). Once women conform to these social norms, the fear of non-conformity and consequences of nonconforming continues, with women and girls still living in heavily socially constructed systems (Leavy et al., 2009). Sport participation, especially in TMS, opposes the association between femininity and athleticism, and instead produces dominant understandings of these constructs as oppositional (Cronan & Scott, 2008; Ho, 2014). Shakib and Dunbar’s (2002) exploration of high school basketball displayed that girls sporting teams are viewed as ‘less than’ boys, regardless of success. This reinforces traditional gendered ideology that masculinity and athleticism are naturally embedded within males, in ways in which femininity has multiple resistances (Cooky, 2009; Shakib & Dunbar, 2002). Therefore this acts as a limiting factor in female participation and continuation of sport. The construction of femininity and athleticism, specifically in TMS, is exceptionally problematic for adolescent females as they are at a particularly vulnerable age in relation to body image, self-esteem, physical appearance and pressure to conform to gender ideologies (Bowker, Gadbois & Cornock, 2003; Russell, 2004). Self-esteem, self-efficacy and body image are related strongly to whether females feel they are conforming to their gender roles as based on gender role expectations (Horn, Newton & Evers, 2011). The int","PeriodicalId":43860,"journal":{"name":"Learning Communities-International Journal of Learning in Social Contexts","volume":"58 1","pages":"138-151"},"PeriodicalIF":1.5000,"publicationDate":"2017-11-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"2","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Embedding a critical inquiry approach across the AC:HPE to support adolescent girls in participating in traditionally masculinised sport\",\"authors\":\"Nadia Bevan, Jennifer Fane\",\"doi\":\"10.18793/LCJ2017.21.11\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Comparison rates between adolescent boys’ and girls’ sport involvement highlights the significant rate of adolescent girls’ cessation of sport participation during their high school years. Despite adolescent girls’ lower rates of participation in sport, Traditionally Masculinised Sports (TMS) have witnessed the highest uptake of female sport participation in comparison with traditionally feminised sports and gender neutral sports. With TMS becoming an increasingly popular option for women and girls’ sport participation, the expansion of opportunities for women and girls to participate in TMS may offer new avenues for increasing the rate of female sport participation during adolescence. As schools are a setting in which adolescents spend a significant amount of their time, and whose curricular mandate is to engage young people in sport and physical activity, investigation into high school settings and their impact on female sport participation in TMS is timely. This paper explores the role in which embedding a critical inquiry approach to sport and the gendered nature of sport participation across the national Australian Curriculum Health and Physical Education (AC:HPE) (Australian Curriculum Assessment and Reporting Authority, 2013) learning area may support girls’ continued sport participation throughout their high school years. It reports on a study which investigated adolescent girls’ (n=34) experiences of participation in the TMS of soccer, cricket, and Australian Football. Thematic analysis of the data uncovered key themes relating to the role of schools in enabling or creating barriers for female sport participation. Key themes evident within the data, such as gendered norms and expectations, opportunities for participation, and the under representation of women in TMS are discussed in relation to key ideas embedded in the AC:HPE curriculum (Australian Curriculum Assessment and Reporting Authority, 2013). The findings suggest ways in which barriers to female sport participation can be challenged using critical inquiry approaches embedded in the AC:HPE curriculum (Australian Curriculum Assessment and Reporting Authority, 2013) and the school and learning environment. Introduction Adolescence is a time when a significant amount of girls drop out of sports or discontinue physical activity (Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS), 2011; Gavin, Mcbrearty & Harvey, 2013). Schools play a critical role in enabling or disabling children and youth’s sport participation 139 Learning Communities | Special Issue: 2017 30th AChPER International Conference | Number 21 – November 2017 through both the culture of the school and in the choices offered for male and female sport participation (Mitchell, Gray & Inchley, 2015). While women and girls participate in a range of physical activity and sports, the rates of uptake for female adolescents into Traditionally Masculinised Sports (TMS) in Australia has currently overtaken the rates of uptake of female adolescents in physical activities and sports considered traditionally feminine and/or gender neutral (ABS, 2011). As such, TMS may offer a vehicle to continue or increase adolescent females’ sport participation at a time where their participation continues to be significantly lower than that of their male peers. Offering choices for girls to participate in TMS in schools and community athletic/sporting clubs is a key factor for supporting female adolescent sport participation (Craike, Symons & Zimmermann, 2009; Mitchell, et al., 2015). Less attention has been given to how breaking down social and cultural barriers, both real and perceived, towards girls’ participation in TMS may support its continued and increased uptake. This paper reports on a study that investigated the experience of 34 adolescent females who were current participants in a TMS to better understand mechanisms and factors that were supportive, or unsupportive, of their sporting participation. The data highlighted that the role of schools and teachers featured prominently in participants’ experiences, though frequently as a barrier or unsupportive factor. Despite that, while similar findings have been found in previous Australian and international studies (Eime et al., 2013; Flintoff & Scraton, 2001; Garrett, 2010), scant attention has been given to how the curriculum itself may be a tool in supporting girls in the uptake and continuation of sport and physical activity both within and outside school contexts. A prominent feature of the national Australian Curriculum Health and Physical Education (AC:HPE) (Australian Curriculum Assessment and Reporting Authority, 2013) learning area is the inclusion of a critical inquiry approach as a key idea, an approach which seeks to give students opportunities to “critically analyse and critically evaluate contextual factors that influence decision-making, behaviours and actions, and explore inclusiveness, power inequalities, assumptions, diversity and social justice” (Australian Curriculum Assessment and Reporting Authority, 2013, retreived from: http://www.australiancurriculum.edu.au/ health-and-physical-education/key-ideas). While the importance of embedding critical inquiry approaches in physical and sport education is far from new (Laker, 2002; Siedentop, 1994; Tinning, 2002), the continuation of higher rates of attrition from physical education, physical activity and sport of female adolescents in comparison with their male peers reinforces the need for critical inquiry approaches to be a key strategy for student engagement within the new AC:HPE curriculum (Australian Curriculum Assessment and Reporting Authority, 2013). As the literature has identified that cultural and social factors impact significantly on adolescent sport participation (see for example Hively & El-Alayli, 2014; Slater & Tiggemann, 2010; Slater & Tiggemann, 2011), critical inquiry approaches may offer a vehicle for engaging students in critically analysing their own and other’s beliefs, behaviours, and practices in relation to the ways in which sport and physical activity participation is highly gendered. The findings of the study are discussed in relation to the rationale, aim, and key ideas of the AC:HPE (Australian Curriculum Assessment and Reporting Authority, 2013) and how critical inquiry approaches may offer avenues for challenging real and perceived barriers to female participation in TMS, both within schools and wider social settings. Challenging social and cultural norms which negatively impact on the sport and physical activity participation of children and youth is a shared aim of both the national curriculum and national/international guidelines, frameworks, and organisations relating to and involving sport. As such, capitalising on opportunities to interrupt and dismantle barriers and challenge harmful gendered social norms is essential to the work of HPE teachers and schools. 140 Embedding a critical inquiry approach across the AC:HPE to support adolescent girls in participating in traditionally masculinised sport Nadia Bevan & Jennifer Fane Literature review While the increase in female participation over the past decade has been statistically significant; males are consistently more likely to play soccer, cricket and football (ABS, 2011). There are a multitude of reasons for this discrepancy including physical, psychological, environmental, time-based, inter-personal, programming, access and opportunity barriers (Johnstone & Millar, 2012). Another important reason for this gendered discrepancy in sport participation is the way in which sport is typically embedded within the development of, and current social constructions of masculinity (Craike et al., 2009; Klomsten Marsh & Skaalvik, 2005; Velija & Malcolm, 2009). Conversely, sport, and specifically traditionally non-feminised sport, does not conform to the gender ideology of femininity, which in many ways opposes participation in sports, specifically TMS (Dodge & Lambert, 2009; Gavin et al., 2013; Leavy, Gnong & Ross, 2009). A substantial amount of research (see Alley & Hicks, 2005; Berger, O’Reilly, Parent, Seguin & Hernandez, 2008; Cooky, 2009), has demonstrated that social constructs significantly impact the activities boys and girls and women and men choose or are able to play, and more specifically, which sports fall within the socially constructed acceptability of feminine and masculine. Leavy, Gnong and Ross argue that “women have been taught that there are social rewards for conformity to the cultural standard of femininity” (2009, p. 280). Once women conform to these social norms, the fear of non-conformity and consequences of nonconforming continues, with women and girls still living in heavily socially constructed systems (Leavy et al., 2009). Sport participation, especially in TMS, opposes the association between femininity and athleticism, and instead produces dominant understandings of these constructs as oppositional (Cronan & Scott, 2008; Ho, 2014). Shakib and Dunbar’s (2002) exploration of high school basketball displayed that girls sporting teams are viewed as ‘less than’ boys, regardless of success. This reinforces traditional gendered ideology that masculinity and athleticism are naturally embedded within males, in ways in which femininity has multiple resistances (Cooky, 2009; Shakib & Dunbar, 2002). Therefore this acts as a limiting factor in female participation and continuation of sport. The construction of femininity and athleticism, specifically in TMS, is exceptionally problematic for adolescent females as they are at a particularly vulnerable age in relation to body image, self-esteem, physical appearance and pressure to conform to gender ideologies (Bowker, Gadbois & Cornock, 2003; Russell, 2004). Self-esteem, self-efficacy and body image are related strongly to whether females feel they are conforming to their gender roles as based on gender role expectations (Horn, Newton & Evers, 2011). 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引用次数: 2

摘要

青春期男孩和女孩体育参与的比较率突出了青春期女孩在高中期间停止体育参与的显著率。尽管少女参加体育运动的比例较低,但与传统上女性化的体育运动和性别中立的体育运动相比,传统上男性化的体育运动(TMS)的女性参与比例最高。随着经颅磁刺激成为妇女和女孩参与体育运动的一种越来越受欢迎的选择,妇女和女孩参与经颅磁刺激的机会的扩大可能为提高青春期女性体育参与率提供新的途径。由于学校是青少年花费大量时间的场所,学校的课程任务是让年轻人参与体育运动和体育活动,因此对高中环境及其对女性参与经颅磁刺激运动的影响进行调查是及时的。本文探讨了在澳大利亚国家课程健康与体育(AC:HPE)(澳大利亚课程评估和报告机构,2013年)学习领域嵌入体育批判性探究方法和体育参与的性别性质的作用,可以支持女孩在整个高中时期继续参与体育活动。它报告了一项研究,调查了青春期女孩(n=34)参与足球、板球和澳大利亚足球的经颅磁刺激体验。对数据的专题分析揭示了与学校在促进或制造阻碍女性参加体育运动方面的作用有关的关键主题。数据中明显的关键主题,如性别规范和期望,参与机会,以及女性在TMS中的代表性不足,与AC:HPE课程(澳大利亚课程评估和报告机构,2013年)中嵌入的关键思想有关。研究结果表明,可以使用AC:HPE课程(澳大利亚课程评估和报告机构,2013年)以及学校和学习环境中嵌入的批判性探究方法来挑战女性参与体育运动的障碍。青春期是大量女孩退出运动或停止体育活动的时期(澳大利亚统计局(ABS), 2011;Gavin, Mcbrearty & Harvey, 2013)。139学习社区|特刊:2017年第30届AChPER国际会议|第21期- 2017年11月通过学校文化和男女体育参与的选择,学校在促进或阻碍儿童和青少年体育参与方面发挥着关键作用(Mitchell, Gray & Inchley, 2015)。虽然妇女和女孩参加了一系列体育活动和运动,但澳大利亚女性青少年参加传统男性化运动(TMS)的比例目前已经超过了女性青少年参加传统女性化和/或性别中立的体育活动和运动的比例(ABS, 2011年)。因此,经颅磁刺激可能提供了一种工具来继续或增加青少年女性的体育参与,因为她们的参与程度仍然明显低于男性同龄人。在学校和社区运动/体育俱乐部为女孩提供参加经颅刺激的选择是支持女性青少年参与体育运动的关键因素(Craike, Symons & Zimmermann, 2009;Mitchell等人,2015)。对于如何打破阻碍女孩参与经颅磁刺激的社会和文化障碍(无论是真实的还是感知的)可能支持其持续和增加的吸收,人们的关注较少。本文报告了一项研究,调查了34名目前参加TMS的青春期女性的经历,以更好地了解支持或不支持她们参加体育运动的机制和因素。数据强调,学校和教师在参与者的经历中扮演着重要的角色,尽管经常成为障碍或不支持的因素。尽管如此,在之前的澳大利亚和国际研究中也发现了类似的发现(Eime et al., 2013;Flintoff & Scraton出版社,2001;Garrett, 2010),很少有人关注课程本身如何成为支持女孩在学校内外接受和继续运动和体育活动的工具。 澳大利亚国家课程健康与体育(AC:HPE)(澳大利亚课程评估和报告局,2013年)学习领域的一个突出特点是将批判性探究方法作为一个关键思想,这种方法旨在为学生提供机会“批判性地分析和批判性地评估影响决策、行为和行动的背景因素,并探索包容性、权力不平等、假设、多样性和社会公正"(澳大利亚课程评估和报告局,2013年,摘自:http://www.australiancurriculum.edu.au/ health-and-physical-education/key-ideas)。虽然在体育和体育教育中嵌入批判性探究方法的重要性并不新鲜(lake, 2002;Siedentop, 1994;Tinning, 2002),与男性同龄人相比,女性青少年在体育教育、体育活动和体育运动方面的流失率持续上升,这加强了对批判性探究方法的需求,这种方法是新AC:HPE课程中学生参与的关键策略(澳大利亚课程评估和报告机构,2013年)。正如文献所指出的那样,文化和社会因素对青少年体育参与有显著影响(参见例如Hively & El-Alayli, 2014;斯莱特和蒂格曼,2010;Slater & Tiggemann, 2011),批判性探究方法可以为学生提供一种工具,让他们批判性地分析自己和他人的信仰、行为和实践,这些信仰、行为和实践与体育和体育活动参与的高度性别化有关。本研究的结果与AC:HPE(澳大利亚课程评估和报告机构,2013年)的基本原理、目标和关键思想有关,以及批判性探究方法如何为挑战学校和更广泛的社会环境中女性参与TMS的实际和感知障碍提供途径。挑战对儿童和青少年参与体育运动和身体活动产生负面影响的社会和文化规范是国家课程和与体育有关的国家/国际准则、框架和组织的共同目标。因此,利用机会打破和消除障碍,挑战有害的性别社会规范,对HPE教师和学校的工作至关重要。140在整个AC:HPE中嵌入批判性调查方法,以支持青春期女孩参与传统上男性化的体育运动Nadia Bevan & Jennifer Fane文献综述虽然过去十年女性参与的增加在统计上显着;男性更倾向于踢足球、板球和足球(ABS, 2011)。造成这种差异的原因有很多,包括身体上的、心理上的、环境上的、时间上的、人际关系上的、编程上的、获取和机会上的障碍(Johnstone & Millar, 2012)。体育参与中这种性别差异的另一个重要原因是,体育通常被嵌入到男子气概的发展和当前社会结构中(Craike et al., 2009;Klomsten Marsh & Skaalvik, 2005;Velija & Malcolm, 2009)。相反,体育运动,特别是传统上非女性化的体育运动,不符合女性化的性别意识形态,这在许多方面反对参与体育运动,特别是TMS (Dodge & Lambert, 2009;Gavin et al., 2013;利维,格农和罗斯,2009)。大量的研究(见Alley & Hicks, 2005;Berger, O 'Reilly, Parent, Seguin & Hernandez, 2008;Cooky(2009)的研究表明,社会结构显著影响男孩和女孩、女人和男人选择或能够参加的活动,更具体地说,哪些运动属于社会构建的女性和男性的可接受性。利维、格农和罗斯认为,“女性被教导,符合女性气质的文化标准会得到社会奖励”(2009年,第280页)。一旦女性符合这些社会规范,对不符合的恐惧和不符合的后果就会继续,妇女和女孩仍然生活在高度社会建构的系统中(利维等人,2009)。体育参与,特别是在经颅磁刺激中,反对女性气质和运动能力之间的联系,相反,产生了对这些构念的主流理解,认为它们是对立的(Cronan & Scott, 2008;何,2014)。Shakib和Dunbar(2002)对高中篮球的研究表明,无论成绩如何,女生运动队都被视为“不如”男生。这强化了传统的性别意识形态,即男性气质和运动能力自然地根植于男性之中,而女性气质则有多重阻力(Cooky, 2009;Shakib & Dunbar, 2002)。因此,这是女性参与和继续体育运动的一个限制因素。 女性气质和运动能力的建构,特别是在经颅刺激中,对青春期女性来说尤其有问题,因为她们在身体形象、自尊、外表和符合性别意识形态的压力方面处于特别脆弱的年龄(Bowker, Gadbois & Cornock, 2003;罗素,2004)。自尊、自我效能和身体形象与女性是否觉得自己符合基于性别角色期望的性别角色密切相关(Horn, Newton & Evers, 2011)。int
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Embedding a critical inquiry approach across the AC:HPE to support adolescent girls in participating in traditionally masculinised sport
Comparison rates between adolescent boys’ and girls’ sport involvement highlights the significant rate of adolescent girls’ cessation of sport participation during their high school years. Despite adolescent girls’ lower rates of participation in sport, Traditionally Masculinised Sports (TMS) have witnessed the highest uptake of female sport participation in comparison with traditionally feminised sports and gender neutral sports. With TMS becoming an increasingly popular option for women and girls’ sport participation, the expansion of opportunities for women and girls to participate in TMS may offer new avenues for increasing the rate of female sport participation during adolescence. As schools are a setting in which adolescents spend a significant amount of their time, and whose curricular mandate is to engage young people in sport and physical activity, investigation into high school settings and their impact on female sport participation in TMS is timely. This paper explores the role in which embedding a critical inquiry approach to sport and the gendered nature of sport participation across the national Australian Curriculum Health and Physical Education (AC:HPE) (Australian Curriculum Assessment and Reporting Authority, 2013) learning area may support girls’ continued sport participation throughout their high school years. It reports on a study which investigated adolescent girls’ (n=34) experiences of participation in the TMS of soccer, cricket, and Australian Football. Thematic analysis of the data uncovered key themes relating to the role of schools in enabling or creating barriers for female sport participation. Key themes evident within the data, such as gendered norms and expectations, opportunities for participation, and the under representation of women in TMS are discussed in relation to key ideas embedded in the AC:HPE curriculum (Australian Curriculum Assessment and Reporting Authority, 2013). The findings suggest ways in which barriers to female sport participation can be challenged using critical inquiry approaches embedded in the AC:HPE curriculum (Australian Curriculum Assessment and Reporting Authority, 2013) and the school and learning environment. Introduction Adolescence is a time when a significant amount of girls drop out of sports or discontinue physical activity (Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS), 2011; Gavin, Mcbrearty & Harvey, 2013). Schools play a critical role in enabling or disabling children and youth’s sport participation 139 Learning Communities | Special Issue: 2017 30th AChPER International Conference | Number 21 – November 2017 through both the culture of the school and in the choices offered for male and female sport participation (Mitchell, Gray & Inchley, 2015). While women and girls participate in a range of physical activity and sports, the rates of uptake for female adolescents into Traditionally Masculinised Sports (TMS) in Australia has currently overtaken the rates of uptake of female adolescents in physical activities and sports considered traditionally feminine and/or gender neutral (ABS, 2011). As such, TMS may offer a vehicle to continue or increase adolescent females’ sport participation at a time where their participation continues to be significantly lower than that of their male peers. Offering choices for girls to participate in TMS in schools and community athletic/sporting clubs is a key factor for supporting female adolescent sport participation (Craike, Symons & Zimmermann, 2009; Mitchell, et al., 2015). Less attention has been given to how breaking down social and cultural barriers, both real and perceived, towards girls’ participation in TMS may support its continued and increased uptake. This paper reports on a study that investigated the experience of 34 adolescent females who were current participants in a TMS to better understand mechanisms and factors that were supportive, or unsupportive, of their sporting participation. The data highlighted that the role of schools and teachers featured prominently in participants’ experiences, though frequently as a barrier or unsupportive factor. Despite that, while similar findings have been found in previous Australian and international studies (Eime et al., 2013; Flintoff & Scraton, 2001; Garrett, 2010), scant attention has been given to how the curriculum itself may be a tool in supporting girls in the uptake and continuation of sport and physical activity both within and outside school contexts. A prominent feature of the national Australian Curriculum Health and Physical Education (AC:HPE) (Australian Curriculum Assessment and Reporting Authority, 2013) learning area is the inclusion of a critical inquiry approach as a key idea, an approach which seeks to give students opportunities to “critically analyse and critically evaluate contextual factors that influence decision-making, behaviours and actions, and explore inclusiveness, power inequalities, assumptions, diversity and social justice” (Australian Curriculum Assessment and Reporting Authority, 2013, retreived from: http://www.australiancurriculum.edu.au/ health-and-physical-education/key-ideas). While the importance of embedding critical inquiry approaches in physical and sport education is far from new (Laker, 2002; Siedentop, 1994; Tinning, 2002), the continuation of higher rates of attrition from physical education, physical activity and sport of female adolescents in comparison with their male peers reinforces the need for critical inquiry approaches to be a key strategy for student engagement within the new AC:HPE curriculum (Australian Curriculum Assessment and Reporting Authority, 2013). As the literature has identified that cultural and social factors impact significantly on adolescent sport participation (see for example Hively & El-Alayli, 2014; Slater & Tiggemann, 2010; Slater & Tiggemann, 2011), critical inquiry approaches may offer a vehicle for engaging students in critically analysing their own and other’s beliefs, behaviours, and practices in relation to the ways in which sport and physical activity participation is highly gendered. The findings of the study are discussed in relation to the rationale, aim, and key ideas of the AC:HPE (Australian Curriculum Assessment and Reporting Authority, 2013) and how critical inquiry approaches may offer avenues for challenging real and perceived barriers to female participation in TMS, both within schools and wider social settings. Challenging social and cultural norms which negatively impact on the sport and physical activity participation of children and youth is a shared aim of both the national curriculum and national/international guidelines, frameworks, and organisations relating to and involving sport. As such, capitalising on opportunities to interrupt and dismantle barriers and challenge harmful gendered social norms is essential to the work of HPE teachers and schools. 140 Embedding a critical inquiry approach across the AC:HPE to support adolescent girls in participating in traditionally masculinised sport Nadia Bevan & Jennifer Fane Literature review While the increase in female participation over the past decade has been statistically significant; males are consistently more likely to play soccer, cricket and football (ABS, 2011). There are a multitude of reasons for this discrepancy including physical, psychological, environmental, time-based, inter-personal, programming, access and opportunity barriers (Johnstone & Millar, 2012). Another important reason for this gendered discrepancy in sport participation is the way in which sport is typically embedded within the development of, and current social constructions of masculinity (Craike et al., 2009; Klomsten Marsh & Skaalvik, 2005; Velija & Malcolm, 2009). Conversely, sport, and specifically traditionally non-feminised sport, does not conform to the gender ideology of femininity, which in many ways opposes participation in sports, specifically TMS (Dodge & Lambert, 2009; Gavin et al., 2013; Leavy, Gnong & Ross, 2009). A substantial amount of research (see Alley & Hicks, 2005; Berger, O’Reilly, Parent, Seguin & Hernandez, 2008; Cooky, 2009), has demonstrated that social constructs significantly impact the activities boys and girls and women and men choose or are able to play, and more specifically, which sports fall within the socially constructed acceptability of feminine and masculine. Leavy, Gnong and Ross argue that “women have been taught that there are social rewards for conformity to the cultural standard of femininity” (2009, p. 280). Once women conform to these social norms, the fear of non-conformity and consequences of nonconforming continues, with women and girls still living in heavily socially constructed systems (Leavy et al., 2009). Sport participation, especially in TMS, opposes the association between femininity and athleticism, and instead produces dominant understandings of these constructs as oppositional (Cronan & Scott, 2008; Ho, 2014). Shakib and Dunbar’s (2002) exploration of high school basketball displayed that girls sporting teams are viewed as ‘less than’ boys, regardless of success. This reinforces traditional gendered ideology that masculinity and athleticism are naturally embedded within males, in ways in which femininity has multiple resistances (Cooky, 2009; Shakib & Dunbar, 2002). Therefore this acts as a limiting factor in female participation and continuation of sport. The construction of femininity and athleticism, specifically in TMS, is exceptionally problematic for adolescent females as they are at a particularly vulnerable age in relation to body image, self-esteem, physical appearance and pressure to conform to gender ideologies (Bowker, Gadbois & Cornock, 2003; Russell, 2004). Self-esteem, self-efficacy and body image are related strongly to whether females feel they are conforming to their gender roles as based on gender role expectations (Horn, Newton & Evers, 2011). The int
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