Acknowledging differences in contexts, the purpose of this paper considers how physical education and sport pedagogy (PESP), while maintaining our collective identity, can most effectively develop a capacity to engage with academic and institutional changes in productive, proactive ways. This, we contend, entails considering extending the groups or communities in which PESP is represented to increase the potential to access substructures with other academic communities. We have chosen a metaphor to frame this work, acknowledging that metaphor can often open-up new ways to view a specific aspect or phenomenon that has been conceived in a common, or perhaps static way. Worked examples of the metaphor are presented from an Irish and Canadian perspective and implications of these examples pose possible ways forward.
History
Publication
Sport, Education and Society; 25 (8), pp. 859-871
Publisher
Taylor and Francis
Note
peer-reviewed
Rights
This is an Author's Manuscript of an article whose final and definitive form, the Version of Record, has been published in Sport, Education and Society 2019 copyright Taylor & Francis, available online at: https://doi.org/10.1080/13573322.2019.1669151