History of Movement Education

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History of Movement Education

Creators of a New Idea: Movement Education in the 1800s


to Early 1900s
The early pioneers of movement education were influenced by the idea of the body being an expression
of movement. Three of the most historically influential individuals were Francois Delsarte, Liselott Diem,
and Rudolf von Laban.
Delsarte
One of the first people to articulate ideas of movement was Francois Delsarte, a Frenchman who lived in
the 19th century. This era was influenced by Romanticism, which emphasized the notion of expression of
thought and emotion. Delsarte developed what he termed applied aesthetics (Brown & Sommer, 1969)
and focused his work in the arts, where he contributed critical ideas of connections among the mind,
body, and spirit. He also saw movement as a union of time, space, and motion. Delsarte suggested that
the combination of movements toward and away from the center of the body was critical to all other
movements.
Delsarte believed that expressive movement should relate to the emotion that inspired that movement. In
addition, he introduced the idea of parallelism in movement—the simultaneous motion of two body parts
in the same direction and in succession. His nine laws of motion referred to altitude, force, motion,
sequence, direction, form, velocity, reaction, and extension. These ideas gave rise to much of what was
to come in the field of movement education.
Liselott Diem
In the mid- to late 1930s, Professor Liselott Diem and her husband, Carl, founded an internationally
known college in Germany, Deutsche Sporthochschule Köln, to train teachers in sport and physical
education. The college taught a “natural approach to teaching children to move effectively in all kinds of
situations” (Brown and Sommer, 1969,
p. 62 ). Children were encouraged to explore movement freely in their own way and according to their
unique stages of development. The teacher’s role was to provide an environment that supported and
fostered this focus. The teacher would use simple equipment such as balls, wands, ropes, boxes, and
benches to allow children to develop a wide variety of movement responses individually, with partners, or
within small groups.
Diem’s approach centered on learning to build movement skills and balance. Teachers were encouraged
to challenge children by asking questions such as “Who can do this?” and “How can this be done
differently?” They would then guide the children toward improving their quality of movement. Diem’s focus
for older children was more on developing an awareness and analysis of muscular force as well as how to
move in time and space.
Rudolf von Laban
Rudolf von Laban (1879-1958) is considered by most as the true pioneer of movement education. A
critical contribution was his theory of movement, focusing specifically on the concept of effort. Laban
believed that the body was an instrument of expression and made a distinction between this expressive
movement and movements that serve a purpose in everyday life (functional movement). Expressive
movement communicates ideas in dance or other forms of artistic expression. Functional movement has
a purpose in addition to helping with the tasks of everyday life, such as sports and games. The four
factors of movement that Laban identified (weight, space, time, and flow) became the bedrock of what
became known as movement education.

Development of a Curricular Approach: 1960s, 1970s, and


1980s
Whereas Laban and his colleagues were concerned with the inner attitude of the mover and the function
of each movement (Stanley, 1977), those who came after them provided a way of regarding movement
and applying this perspective to the teaching of physical education. The intent of those working at this
time was to provide a framework that teachers could use to apply these movement concepts broadly in
the following three learning domains:

 Cognitive
 Psychomotor
 Affective

The 1960s and 1970s witnessed a growth in the field of movement education. Gilliom (1970), Kirchner
(1977), Logsdon and colleagues (1977, 1984), Maulden and Layson (1965), Maulden and Redfern
(1969), Russell (1975), Stanley (1977), and many others brought movement education to the forefront of
elementary physical education.
Movement Concepts
Stanley (1977) and Logsdon and colleagues (1984) identified the four major movement concepts as body
(representing the instrument of the action), space (where the body is moving), effort (the quality with
which the movement is executed), and relationships (the connections that occur as the body moves—with
objects, people, and the environment). Logsdon and colleagues (1984) suggested that how much children
gain from their physical education learning experience is related to how well the teacher is able to
understand, interpret, and implement the movement content. They suggested that the teacher’s goal
should be to develop enough knowledge about movement to help learners become skilled in executing all
aspects of the movement content.
Fitness Overshadows Movement Education
The fitness boom of the 1970s resulted in a base of research that contributed a solid scientific basis to the
study of movement. Movement education was not getting this kind of support and therefore was not met
with the same level of enthusiasm in this era. As other curriculum models were introduced that were
easier to understand and appealed to the fitness and activity focus of the time, movement education
faded from popularity.

Movement Education: At the Heart of Physical Education


The MEF is clearly not a new idea. As ideas developed, the framework for movement education became
more and more complex. Professionals began to disagree about the use or exact meaning of terms. As a
result, the concepts of human movement and early presentations of the MEF sometimes became
intimidating and difficult to use in practical settings. This may have been one of the reasons movement
education lost momentum and was by and large replaced by other curricular frameworks over the years.
Critics might say that movement education, which was popular in the 1960s, 1970s, and even into the
1980s, is now passé. One of our objectives is to revive this most basic approach to teaching physical
education because we believe that it provides not only the basic framework for physical education, but
also the basics all educators—both physical education and classroom teachers—are searching for to
provide the foundation for teaching physical education. The framework used in this book is a distillation of
former versions of the MEF and a combination of the previous works of many, including but not limited to,
the authors cited in this chapter (e.g., Laban, Stanley, Logsdon, Roberton, Gilliom, Maulden).
One of the primary goals of this text is to present a revised MEF that is easy to follow, easy to use, and
meaningful for physical educators, classroom educators, and most important, children. We do this by
focusing on the movement concepts, movement categories, and particularly, the movement elements,
and their application to what we are calling the core content areas: educational games, educational
gymnastics, and educational dance.
It is important for readers of this text to understand how the MEF is tied to current national standards.
Some of the classic outcomes of a movement education program are described in the first two National
Association for Sport and Physical Education (NASPE, a subspecialty group of the American Alliance for
Health, Physical Education, Recreation and Dance [AAHPERD]) standards (2004):

 Standard 1. Demonstrates competency in motor skills and movement patterns needed to perform a
variety of physical activities.
 Standard 2. Demonstrates understanding of movement concepts, principles, strategies, and tactics as
they apply to the learning and performance of physical activities.

From NASPE, 2004, Moving into the future: National standards for physical education, 2nd ed. (Reston,
VA: National Association for Sport and Pysical Education) 11.

The Philosophy That Makes Movement Education Different


All physical educators want to provide lessons that foster success. The MEF, however, focuses on not
only fostering motor success, but also developing cognitive knowledge about movement. Movement
education is about developing a very wide base so that students develop skill in executing many types of
movement. To establish this wide base, the movement education approach uses a specific framework for
classifying movement and encourages learners to build a movement vocabulary that they can apply to all
subsequent movement content.
The MEF is adaptable to students of all ages and developmental stages. It serves as a thread that runs
through all movement in all situations. As Logsdon and Barrett (1984) noted, “Movement is the content of
physical education” (Logsdon et al., p. 141). Teachers can continually incorporate vocabulary from the
framework into lesson introductions, feedback during a lesson, and lesson closures. Similarly, children
can communicate with the teacher and with other children about their movement, thus creating a
wonderful learning environment for all.
Student Problem Solving in Movement Education
Success for all, activity for all, and contributions by all are all key values in a movement education
program. Specific approaches in presenting content are critical. Using methodology based on the process
of discovery and techniques of problem solving (Gilliom, 1970) allows children to discover their own
methods and ways of solving movement problems. Creative thinking is required, and individual solutions,
which may be unique to the problem solver, are not only allowed but also encouraged because we all
experience new and often more complex movement challenges throughout life. Children in movement
education programs do much more than merely learn skills; they learn to apply movement elements and
create solutions to both simple and complex movement problems.
Guided Problem Solving in Movement Education
We address some guided discovery methods in the core content chapters of this book (11-13). According
to Mosston and Ashworth (1986), the guided discovery approach involves students solving teacher-
created problems with guidance from the teacher. In addition to guided discovery, teachers also provide
students with learning cues. Chapter 3 provides examples of the teacher-directed cues for learning
locomotor skills such as skipping, hopping, and jumping, as well as manipulative skills such as throwing
and catching.
Problem-solving techniques were expounded upon by Gillion (1970). An example of putting teaching cues
and problem solving together might sound like this: “Today, we are going to learn about the springlike
actions of leaping, hopping, skipping, jumping, and galloping.” You might then present the learning cues
via pocket chart cards (movement element definitions) for each of these skills. After formally presenting
the definition of hopping, you can then informally remind the students that when we hop, we travel from
one foot to the same foot, whereas jumping involves several different types of movement patterns. With
these cues in mind, students may then be encouraged to demonstrate the various springlike actions by
creating a traveling sequence using those actions. This task emphasizes a pure problem-solving
approach.
Providing Choices Enhances Learning
The way you present the movement challenge or task can foster success by respecting students’
individuality. One way to present a challenge is to provide extensions, making the task either easier or
harder as needed. Following is an example of how you might use extensions with movement education.
A more traditional approach to presenting a movement problem related to rocking and rolling might be to
ask all children to do a forward roll. However, using extensions, you might say, “Some of you may wish to
try this next task, whereas others may choose to continue working on log rolls. For those who would like
to try, think about rolling in a forward direction, keeping your chin tucked to your chest and pushing with
your hands to help you transfer your weight onto the back of your shoulders as you complete rolling in a
forward direction.” Other ways to offer extensions could be, “If you are ready, you can try . . .” or, “For
those of you who would like to try a more difficult task . . . .” Giving students options in all situations helps
them decide their comfort level in task completion (Logsdon et al., 1984; Rink, 2006).

Summary
The earliest inklings of movement education occurred in the late 1800s in the field of dance. The concept
really didn’t gain popularity and become known as movement education until the 1960s, 1970s, and into
the 1980s. The fitness boom and other curriculum models replaced movement education, possibly as a
result of its complexity and the difficulty teachers had making it relevant to middle and high school
physical education curricula. In the late 1990s and early 2000s, the development of national content
standards for physical education brought back the essence of movement education by emphasizing that
children should know basic movement concepts and be able to perform basic movement patterns.

syllabus
Aim: To develop in trainees an understanding of the concepts of Movement Education.

Learning Outcomes: By the end of the module, trainees should be able to:
identify key concepts in Movement Education
structure and plan teaching progressions using Movement Education approach
integrate Movement Education in Physical Education
integrate minor games in Physical Education

Content
Movement concepts
Movement Education Framework
Body: Physical and Spatial awareness
Gross and fine motor movements
Qualities of movement
Minor games
Minor Games in the Physical Education curriculum

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