Previous Page Copyright Saskatchewan Education Copyright Saskatchewan Education Evergreen Main Menu Table of Contents Go To Discussion Area Next Page

Planning

Steps in Planning Physical Education

There is no precise formula for going about planning. Different teachers will approach planning in different ways. Various factors, including personal beliefs, values and preferences influence the process. The guidelines in this section are intended as suggestions only.

Prepare a balanced year plan using a year planning calendar, indicating:


Develop units, that outline planning considerations and materials under the following headings:

Prepare lesson plans that take into account the following factors:

Yearly Planning Guide

Factors To Be Considered :

Yearly Overview and Calendar

How much time will you spend teaching the concept Space (levels, directions, etc.) to your grade one students? How many hours will you spend teaching your grade five students how to strike with short-handled implements such as paddles and racquets? The first step of the planning process involves preparing a yearly overview of the program that indicates how the total number of hours available for physical education will be allocated. The Sample Yearly Planning Calendar provided in this curriculum guide may be used for this purpose. (A template is provided at the end of this section.)

The following information is to assist teachers in using the calendar:

1. In rows one and two of the Yearly Panning Calendar, indicate the day and dates of your physical education classes for the year.

2. Row three is used to indicate which of the three perspectives you will be teaching.

· Active Living Perspective?

· Movement Perspective?

· Personal-Social-Cultural Perspective?

· There are no prescribed time allotments for each perspective nor any precise formulas for determining how much time should be allocated to each one. Teachers have to rely on their professional judgment.

3. In the fourth row of the Yearly Planning Calendar, indicate the Activity Area(s) for each physical education class. To do this, the suggested time allotments for each Activity Area presented in Part One may be used as a guide.

· The program emphasizes movement skill learning (Movement Perspective).

· Learning experiences that contribute to the attainment of the objectives of the Active Living and Personal-Social-Cultural

· perspectives will be incorporated into the units and lessons prepared for each Activity Area-including the 12 hours of Optional time.

· A total of 94 hours.

· The 94 hours available for the instructional physical education program have been distributed as follows:

· Physical education is taught five days per week (QDPE-Quality Daily Physical Education).

· Each lesson lasts 30 minutes.

4. In the fourth row of the calendar, indicate the dominant concept for each lesson.

· the results of your assessment of students' movement skill and physical fitness levels

· your facilities and equipment

· etc.

5. In the fifth row, indicate the sub-concept.

6 In the sixth row, indicate the focus of each lesson.

· In a lesson where the dominant concept is Landings and the sub-concept is Landings on the hands, the focus could be Landings on the hands forward.

· In a lesson and Directions is the sub-concept, clockwise and counterclockwise could be the focus.

7. The seventh row is used to indicate the Common Essential Learnings that will be emphasized in each lesson.

Yearly Calendar Abbreviations

Activity Areas

Alternative Environment Activities AE, Rhythmics & Dance RD, Educational Games GA, Educational Gymnastics GY, Individual & Dual Activities ID, Optional OP

Concepts

Active Living (AL)

(AL 1) Regular participation in physical activity

(AL 2) Positive attitude toward physical activity

(AL 3) Benefits and effects of physical activity

(AL 4) Personal growth and development

(AL 5) Nutrition and physical activity

(AL 6) Physical activity in a natural setting

(AL 7) Safety while engaged in physical activity

Movement (M)

Basic Movement Patterns (BMP):

Sending Send, Receiving Rece, Accompanying Acco, Evading Evad, Locomotions Loco, Landings Land, Statics Stat, Rotations Rota, Springs Spri, Swings Swin

Movement Variables (MV):

Body Body: Actions Act , Parts Par, Shapes Sha

Space Spac: Areas Are, Directions Dir, Levels Lev, Orientations Ori, Pathways Pat, Ranges Ran

Effort Effo: Force For, Time Tim, Flow Flo

Relationships Rela: Body Parts BoPa, Partners and Groups PaGr, Equipment Equi

Movement Principles (MP):

Stability Stab, Force Forc, Other Othe

Movement Strategies (MS):

Cooperative Coop, Offensive Offe, Defensive Defe, Other Othe

Personal-Social-Cultural (PSC)

(PSC 1) Respect for the rights and feelings of others

(PSC 2) Participation and effort

(PSC 3) Self-direction

(PSC 4) Caring about and helping others

(PSC 5) Using these values outside of physical education classes

(PSC 6) Work and leisure

Common Essential Learnings

Communication C, Numeracy N, Critical and Creative Thinking CCT, Technological Literacy TL, Personal and Social Values and Skills PSVS, Independent Learning IL

Sample Yearly Planning Calendar

Year ______ Month September 16-30 No. of lessons: _11_

(Duration of each lesson: 30 min.)

Day

Tue

Wed

Thu

Fri

Mon

Tue

Wed

Thu

Fri

Mon

Tue

Date

16

17

18

19

22

23

24

25

26

29

30

Perspective

                     

Activity

Area

                     

Dominant

Concept

                     

Sub-concept

                     

Focus

                     

CEL

                     

HOURS REMAINING

OP: /12

AE: /10

RD: /14

GA: /24

GY: /24

ID: /10


Back to Previous Paragraph

Yearly Planning Calendar

Year ______ Month ______________ No. of lessons: ____

Day

                     

Date

                     

Perspective

                     

Activity Area

                     

Dominant Concept

                     

Sub-concept

                     

Focus

                     

CEL

                     

HOURS REMAINING

OP:

AE:

RD:

GA:

GY:

ID:

Unit Planning Guide

Units are organized in keeping with the yearly plan that has been established.

There are a variety of ways to go about planning a unit but regardless of the planning methods used, all units share some common elements.

In planning units, teachers should incorporate the following procedures:

· Review curriculum requirements and grade-specific expectations.

· Consider student learning needs, abilities, interests, cultural and experiential backgrounds.

· Consider facilities and equipment available.

· Select a unit focus. The major concepts of the physical education program identified in Part One of this guide should serve as the dominant organizers for most of the units.

· Determine a rationale for the unit.

· Consider the unit focus as it relates to other subjects. How might it be linked to topics, concepts or themes in other subject areas? How can learning experiences in other subjects extend or reinforce the unit focus? Consult curriculum guides from other areas of study for webbing and integration possibilities.

· Select appropriate foundational and learning objectives from the curriculum guide.

· Select appropriate foundational and learning objectives for the Common Essential Learnings.

· Consider how to incorporate the Components and Initiatives of Core Curricula.

· Identify the instructional strategies.

· Identify vocabulary to be developed.

· Gather related resources.

· Consult curriculum guide bibliography.

· Enlist assistance of students, librarian, colleagues.

· Consider school and community resources-print materials, electronic, audio-visual, human.

· Consider applicability of resources from other subject areas.

· Select, design, adapt and modify activities. Ensure that activities are appropriate for the facilities and equipment available.

· Consider each activity to determine how it might be linked to topics in other subject areas. Modify the activities to strengthen these connections. Integrate with other subjects where appropriate.

· Organize the activities into lessons. A lesson need not be a specific length. A lesson may be only 15 minutes long or it may extend over a number of days or weeks, using a variable amount of time each day.

· Analyze how the Common Essential Learnings can be developed within the activities of each lesson. In some cases the activity will dictate which Common Essential Learnings are developed. In other cases, the activity may be such that the instructional approaches used to guide the student can be selected to emphasize particular Common Essential Learnings.

· Create a time schedule for the unit that shows the lesson structure within the unit. (The Sample Yearly Calendar that appears in this document could be used for this purpose.)

· Concepts should be revisited in different ways, contexts and/or environments at various times throughout the year.

· Consider splitting the unit into sections that can be done at various times during the school year. A four-week unit on gymnastics in January will not be as effective as one week in each of October, December, February and March.

· Focusing on a concept (e.g., Rotations) only once during the year is not as effective as revisiting the concept regularly throughout the year.

· A general guideline to follow when scheduling a unit-especially units that involve movement skill learning-is to mass the practice in the beginning of the year and distribute it later. When a concept is first introduced, students may need several lessons in a row (massed practice) to grasp the main ideas. Thereafter, the concept is revisited for shorter periods of time; the remaining hours allocated to the concept are distributed throughout the year. For example, for a unit organized around the concept Sending, the 7 hours allotted to the study of the sub-concept Throwing could be distributed as follows:

Note: These are lessons or parts of lessons where throwing is the dominant concept-where the objective is the development of some aspect of throwing. Students will of course be throwing in many other lessons, but at these times throwing is not the dominant concept.

Consider having students revisit concepts through assignments to be done at home and in the community. (e.g., revisiting the Active Living concept of "Positive attitude toward physical activity" by participating in a physical activity that they enjoy at home or in the community.)

· Develop an evaluation plan for the unit that includes assessment strategies, observation and record-keeping procedures, selecting or designing assessment and evaluation instruments, etc. Help on this aspect of planning is available elsewhere in this guide and in Saskatchewan Education's student evaluation handbook. Just as a variety of activities will have been chosen to accomplish the objectives of the unit, a variety of evaluation strategies should be employed so that various aspects of learning can be assessed.

· List possible unit adaptations and modifications to accommodate individual needs, interests and abilities.

· Consider collaborative teacher-student planning of the unit.

Lesson Planning Guide

There are many ways to go about planning a lesson and a variety of lesson plan formats. However, most physical education lessons share the following elements.

· Dominant Concept

· Sub-concept(s)

· Focus

· Level

Beginner

Intermediate

Advanced

· Objectives

Related to the concept(s)

Related to the Common Essential Learnings

· Instructional Strategies and Methods

· Materials and Equipment

· Organization and Management

Organization of students, use of space, safety considerations, location of large equipment, rules, routines (protocols), etc.

This information may be in the form of diagrams, stick figures or other graphics.

· Introduction

Sets the tone for the lesson-provokes students' interest.

The `What' and `Why' of the lesson-may also include some `Hows'.

An introductory movement activity may serve as a warm-up, as a lead-in activity for the lesson or both.

· Learning Experiences

Concord with the objectives of the lesson.

Include adaptations, extensions, refinements, challenges and applications.

· Closure/Assessment Strategies and Instruments

Review of the key points of the lesson stated in the objectives and emphasized throughout the lesson; why students are engaged in certain activities.

May be in the form of questions-students' answers provide insights regarding the extent to which the lesson objectives have been attained.

· Reflection

Were the lesson objectives realistic?

Which learning experiences contributed the best to the attainment of the lesson objectives?

Which needed to be changed?

What do I need to emphasize the next time I revisit this concept?

A template for planning lessons has been provided in the Sample Lesson Plans section of this guide.


Previous Page Copyright Saskatchewan Education Copyright Saskatchewan Education Evergreen Main Menu Table of Contents Go To Discussion Area Next Page