Background: Student attitudes toward education are of great concern to educators around the world. Fostering Student’s positive interest in physical education is of great concern in academia. More importantly, the rationale as to why one would maintain a positive interest in physical education is of concern. These topics have been widely researched. However, the comparison of gender and ethnicity as it relates to students’ interest in physical education is a novel investigation. The purpose of this study was to ascertain the relationship between elementary student’s interest in physical education considering gender, ethnicity, curricular and teacher influences, and student’s perceived competency.
Methods: Participants included 99 fifth-grade
elementary school students (62 males, 37 females). Participant selection was
conducted by utilizing 6 intact physical education classes from a single
culturally diverse elementary school. Racial and ethnic distribution for fifth
graders consists of 54.69% Caucasian, 37.50% African American, and 2.34%
Hispanic, 4.69% Asian, and .78% Multicul¬tural. The Physical Education Interest
Questionnaire was the instrument used for this study as well as open-ended
questions for qualitative analysis [1]. Statistical analysis was done to
analyze the collected data.
Results: Findings indicated that students, regardless
of ethnicity and gender, maintained a positive interest in physical education.
However, male students maintained greater interest in physical education than
female students, irrespective of ethnicity. Caucasian students maintained
significantly higher interest than other ethnicities. Perceived competence had
the most effect on students’ overall interest. Answers to open-ended questions
supported these results.
Author(s) Details:
John D Hatten,
Keiser University, United States.
James C Hannon,
Kent State University, United States.
Please see the link here: https://stm.bookpi.org/NVMMS-V4/article/view/14001
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