Changes in experiences and engagement of adolescent girls in Physical Education classes, during a school-based physical activity programme : a qualitative longitudinal study.
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Abstract
There is a growing body of literature investigating age-related
declines in physical activity (PA) participation among young people
and especially girls, who have lower rates of PA than boys
throughout the teenage years. Low PA is particularly apparent within
the context of the school physical education classes – termed here
as the Physical Education (PE) environment. My PhD thesis aims to
explore the reasons for some girls disengagement in PE classes.
Using a longitudinal qualitative approach the study tracks the
experiences of a sample of ‘disengaged girls’ from four case study
schools in Scotland taking part in a school-based physical activity
programme, Fit for Girls (FfG). My research investigates the impact
of the programme on their engagement through recording and
analysis of the changes that take place in their attitudes and
behaviour over the course of two years.
The study involved the design of a questionnaire to identify a cohort
of disengaged girls for baseline focus groups. Twelve focus groups
(n=41 girls) were carried out during 2008/09 (three in each case
study school) to capture girls’ opinions, perceptions and experiences
of PE classes. Twenty disengaged girls were then selected across
the four schools, based on their willingness to participate and self-disclose
PE experiences. The girls were recruited for three phases of
longitudinal in-depth interviews, over a one year period. The aim of
these was to track changes in girls’ engagement and experiences in
the PE environment. My theoretical framework is based on Welks
(1999) Youth Physical Activity Promotion model (YPAP), a socioecological
approach which divides the influential correlates of
physical activity into 1) individual-level predisposing factors, 2)
enabling factors, including personal attributes and environmental
variables and 3) reinforcing (social) factors.
The results indicate that individual predisposing factors, such as
perceptions of competence and identity in the PE class along with
the social context (peers and teachers) contribute to girls’
disengagement in PE. This suggests that aspects of the wider
psychosocial environment in which PE takes place may be more
important than the physical activity itself, impacting on levels of
participation and enjoyment. There were subtle, as well as clear
changes in engagement among many of the girls. However, for
others no change was evident. Individual girls’ experiences across
time or ‘journeys’ illustrate the importance of the relationships
between the individual, social and PE environment in facilitating and
sustaining positive change.
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