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Sports as an Institution

Sports as an Institution. What is Sport as an Institution?. Social Practice Gets individuals involved with others Works on social skills Involves goals and certain outcomes. How it all Started. Europeans During the Renaissance period Greek art portrayed beauty, and became ideal

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Sports as an Institution

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  1. Sports as an Institution

  2. What is Sport as an Institution? • Social Practice • Gets individuals involved with others • Works on social skills • Involves goals and certain outcomes

  3. How it all Started... Europeans • During the Renaissance period • Greek art portrayed beauty, and became ideal • The knowledge of human physical activity progressed; new sports were developed

  4. Victorian Era • Sports were a reflection of life • “What held true in a game, held true in life” • Physical education became important • Participation was key, not winning • Phys. Ed. and organized sports grew

  5. Early Timeline of Physical Education 1830: • Upper Canada College (private school) • First school to carry over traditional games 1846: • Egerton Ryerson intro. public education plan • Part of curriculum, but not mandatory

  6. 1852: • Normal school established on Toronto • Physical training in curriculum • Focused mostly on gymnastics 1872: • The Ontario Education Act • Recognized as school subject 1878: • Teacher’s certificates awarded • Proficiency in physical training

  7. 1880: • Extracurricular activities organized 1889: • Physical training becomes compulsory 1909: • The Strathcona Trust established • Funding for physical education

  8. Sports in Society Video

  9. Importance of Play • Learn about themselves • Learn about those around them • Their environment • Community • All above result in a child’s well-being, self esteem and effective learning methods

  10. Playing...

  11. Well Being • Due to technology more children are becoming inactive • Increase encouragement, increase life expectancy, and decrease disease • Fun activities = increase in participation rates • Positive physical, mental, and emotional well being builds self esteem

  12. Self Esteem • Positive outlook with realistic goals • Positive family & community relations Develop social skills • Accept them • Has to feel safe and secure • Meet child’s needs

  13. Punishments must be realistic, but honest • Cheerful and supportive with decisions • Positive living environment increases self esteem • Benefits them in social interactions and learning methods

  14. Learning Methods • Younger they are, easier to teach • Techniques: • Playing  powerful tool • Imitation  mechanical • Repetition  kids understand better • Role playing  effective and creative • Reaching level of confidence they will accept words, ideas and concepts • Important to expose different learning methods

  15. Physical Education in Today’s Society • Phys. Ed. promotes physical activity • Amount of time devoted to sport has decreased since 1990 • Ontario Gov. in 2000 made it mandatory for teachers to participate in extracurricular activities • Organizations that support sports: • Canadian Intramural Recreation Association • Canadian School Sport Federation • OFSAA

  16. Community Centres • Common meeting ground • Physical activity is a mean • Involved in community • Interact and support one another • Pursue healthy lifestyle • Inclusive, educational and fun

  17. Fun Leagues • Examples: Basketball, soccer and baseball • Abide my playing fair • Limited competitive aspects • Emphasis on skill development • Relaxed atmosphere

  18. Physical Health & Sport • Children less active then 30 years ago • Boys are more active then girls • Inactive children grow to be obese • Inactivity causes: • Heart disease & stroke (1) • High blood pressure • Osteoporosis • Depression • Colon cancer & on set diabetes

  19. Government Funding and High School Sports • The government has always contemplated funding high school sports • High School athletics are beneficial to students and do deserve the governments money • Participating in sports promotes a healthy active life for the teen • Teaches team work skills that can be used in and out of the class room • Occupies the student athletes time doing something structured ad supervised

  20. Healthy Lifestyle • The government funding extra curricular sports through schools shows they care about he students well being • Starting these activities young as a teen will help them continue to be that way all through life • Obesity rating will go down in the Nation with more physically active kids • Healthier people means less money they have to put into the health care system of Canada • Participating in sports also reduces stress of the athlete with a good type of stress

  21. Valuable Skills • Playing an organized team sport forces the athlete to learn to work as a unit with their teammates • If the players want to be successful they must build up the athletes with positive encouragement • These skills also transfer into the classroom when students are doing group perform and need to work together or the work suffers • This can also develop better employees for their later years when they are around co-workers • Playing these sports also helps people control their nerves so they work better under pressure and don’t fold under it

  22. Spending Time The Right Way • Teens with to much free time mostly spend it the wrong way • Teens are stereo typed for committing crimes • With a sport to play in their free time means they have a supervised structured activity • Student athletes are also known to be smarter than none athletes • Student athletes are also more punctual for class because they are required to attend class for their sport

  23. Benefits of a Physically Active Population • Healthier mentally • Decreased depression • Higher self-esteem • Stronger social ties are created with greater bonds and friendships

  24. Benefits of Sport - Healthier Inside • Lowers risks of Heart disease Stroke Cancer Type 2 diabetes • Healthier lifestyle choices Food choices Lower drug and alcohol use

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