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SPORT in EDUCATION PROJECT

SPORT in EDUCATION PROJECT. “Sport is a means to an end, a vehicle to engage kids to achieve better outcomes. It is not a health strategy, it is an education strategy” Baroness Sue Campbell, Chair Youth Sport Trust & Sport UK. Like playing sport. Age / gender key points:

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SPORT in EDUCATION PROJECT

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  1. SPORT in EDUCATION PROJECT “Sport is a means to an end, a vehicle to engage kids to achieve better outcomes. It is not a health strategy, it is an education strategy” Baroness Sue Campbell, Chair Youth Sport Trust & Sport UK

  2. Like playing sport • Age / gender key points: • Majority of boys & girls “like a lot” • %s “don’t like” small • %s decrease with age • When you compare overall: • More Pacific boys & girls “like a lot” • Fewer Asian boys & girls “like a lot”

  3. Vox Pop

  4. Sport has the ability to Engage students in learning ….. Improving academic achievement Reducing negative social outcomes - truancy, stand-downs, exclusions Enhancing social cohesion both within schools and in the community

  5. independent charity, established in 1994 to: • “Build a brighter future for young people through PE and sport, focused on creating PE and sport system that reaches, inspires and engages all young people.” • Improving the PE & Sport experience for every young person • Using PE and Sport to inspire learning and achievement • Enabling every young person to enjoy competition and providing support to the most talented • Developing a new generation of coaches working in schools • Connecting school and club sport • Supporting the development of young leaders and volunteers

  6. “Sports Specialist schools in the UK have recorded the fastest rates of academic improvement (5+ A –C incl English & Maths) of all UK schools for the past 3 years.” Report on Sports Colleges GCSE performance 2009 “As a result of investing in Sport and Physical Education, schools themselves have become happier, healthier and more successful and pupils have greater confidence and self-esteem” Qualifications and Curriculum Development Agency (UK) PE and School Sport Report (PESS) 2007 “Clearly, the rest of the school has something to learn from what is happening in the PE department” Patrick Leeson, Director, Ofsted

  7. Carshalton Boys Sports College: (London, non-selective, comprehensive) “The sports specialist status permeates every aspect of the college's work, raising standards and boosting student self-esteem.” –OFSTED report “8 years ago the school was badly under-achieving. Becoming a Sports College transformed the school and PE has driven quality teaching across the school. - Simon Barber, Principal Willenhall School Sports College (Walsall, co-ed , 1600 students) “Student leadership is the main contributor to whole school development. It started with the Sport specialism and is driven by PE. Olympic and Paralympic values are at the heart of school culture”. “We now have 80% of students achieving 5 A-C GCSE, up from 40% and it is the specialism that has driven this. PE has averaged 90% pass rate in GCSE for the last 4 years with all 270 students in the cohort sitting – it is not an option” Vicki Till, Principal

  8. The International Evidence regarding the link between Sport / PE and academic achievementis persuasive Among dozens of projects, the research has included: Source: Brain Boost: sport and physical activity enhance children’s learning Dr Karen Martin – University of Western Australia May 2010

  9. Loughborough University – Lit Review 2010 • As little as 10 minutes of additional organised physical activity in or outside the classroom implemented into the school day improves classroom behaviour, and consequently may enhance academic performance • Young individuals who participate in organised sport demonstrate lower rates of anti-social behaviour which may result in less disaffection from school • Physical education, physical activity and sport have been shown to impact positively on the extent to which young people feel connected to their school; the aspirations of young people; the extent to which positive social behaviours exist within school; and the development of leadership and citizenship skills

  10. NZ Curriculum awindow of opportunity for SPORT • Vision • Confident • Connected • Actively involved • Lifelong learners • Principles • High expectations • Learning to learn • Community engagement • Cultural diversity • Coherence • Treaty of Waitangi • Inclusion • Values • Excellence • Innovation, inquiry and curiosity • Diversity • Community and participation • Equity • Integrity • Ecological sustainability • Key Competencies • Thinking • Relating to others • Participating and contributing • Using language, symbols and text • Managing self

  11. Vox pop teachers

  12. Workstreams

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