Shaping Physical Activity through Facilitating Student Agency in Secondary Schools in the Netherlands
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Students’ PA-Related Agency
- Offering PA choice options and opportunities to shape PAs can contribute to students’ freedom to participate, or not, in existing practices;
- Reflection upon PA experiences contributes to autonomy in weighing options and possibilities of participating in PA;
- Enabling the transfer of PAs to other contexts contributes to students’ navigational agency by facilitating the adaptation of practices in these different contexts.
1.2. ‘Space’ for Students’ Agency in Schools as Social Practice
- Meaning: a school’s vision, mission, and pedagogical approach to their task in general, and allowing for the development of students’ agency in general and PA in particular;
- Materials: the access to infrastructural facilities such as playgrounds, the natural environment and the community around the school, allowing for PAs, including roads and cycling infrastructure, as well as choice options provided in PAs in lessons, during breaks or before and after school;
- Competencies: the management style and priorities, skills and practical know-how of teachers, staff, municipal sports professionals and other stakeholders in the school practice and community to provide conditions for developing PA-related student agency.
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design and Contextualisation
2.2. Participants and Recruitment
2.3. Data Collection
2.4. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Whole School Approach and Agency Components across Schools
3.2. Social Practice Dimensions per School
4. Discussion
Strengths and Critical Reflections
5. Conclusions
6. Recommendations
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Note
References
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Contextual Agency | |||
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School Practice Enhances Awareness of PA Options (Not Manipulated by Others; Autonomy and Context) | School Practice Provides Choice Options and Allows Students to Choose and Organise PA (Not Interfered with by Others; Freedom and Context) | ||
Whole-School (WSA) Components | Physical Education, PA during school time, PA before and after school |
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School’s infrastructural (im)possibilities |
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Staff |
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Family and community engagement |
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Community infrastructure |
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School 1 | School 2 | School 3 | School 4 | School 5 | School 6 | |
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Meaning | A Roman Catholic school. Students are prepared for an independent life in society through individual and collaborative learning. Students learn to take responsibility for their learning process, society and nature. School policy fosters human dignity, well-being, solidarity, justice and subsidiarity. The schools’ pedagogical and didactical Leitmotiv is that for students to develop into mature and well-balanced adults, they need to acquire knowledge and develop their socio-emotional, creative, spiritual, physical and technological competencies. | The school’s vision on the importance of pursuing citizenship competencies is deeply embedded in school practice. Core values: 1. Trust in students’ and teachers’ development; 2. Aiming at increasing responsibility; 3. Accepting differences between people; 4. Providing freedom in mutuality. The school aims for each student to develop an independent identity free from the judgements of others. They form their judgements, are critical and think for themselves. The school is a place to meet and connect. | The schools embrace the responsibility to teach their students competencies to become responsible and engaged citizens. One of the critical elements of the schools’ policy is that students fully use their talents. Students are taken seriously; staff seek their opinion and ideas and encourages them to ask questions. | Mission: every student masters his/her talents. It offers students the opportunity to become active citizens and to excel. All students learn that employing their talents means participating fully in society. Core values are:
| Vision: focus on offering opportunities to students; each student has the right to discover and develop his or her talents. Students are facilitated in making informed study choices. Core values are: ambition, openness, safety, a focus on collaboration, pride. | Mission: every student can fully develop into a self-conscious, autonomous, socially involved young person with entrepreneurial qualities who contributes to society sustainably, now and in the future. Motto: space for talent. Core values and vision on learning:
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Materials | In- and outdoor sports facilities and playground, only available under the supervision of an adult (teacher, parent). The bicycle shed is out of sight (dangerous, prone to vandalism, etc.). Sometimes the whole school building is used as a playground for specific PAs. Most students use active transport (bicycle) to come to school. | Excellent PA amenities, in- and outdoors, allowing active transport to school (cycling). Improved bicycle shed and made the traffic situation safer in front of the school. However, amenities are not always available for students to use, i.e., breaks, or before or after school, because of other PE classes, neighbours, supervision requirements. Most children cycle to school; others have a seasonal bus pass or are brought to school by car (in winter). | The school uses in- and outdoor facilities, most of which are owned by the municipality (school is not in control of their use). There are plans for new construction including sports facilities. Most students cycle to school. | Lack of PA infrastructure. Playground used for PAs during breaks and sometimes for PE lessons which can be seen from the classrooms: using it for PA/PE causes embarrassment. An E-fit classroom is available for individual (gaming) exercise. Students can use the infrastructure under supervision. Students cycle to school—dangerous traffic situation near the school; supervised in the afternoon. | In- and outdoor sports facilities allow children to cycle to school. School amenities are not available for PA outside PE lessons because they are in (preparatory) use for other PE lessons or by sports associations (after school). Most students cycle to school. | In- and outdoor sports facilities, including a multifunctional sports court. Students can use them, both under supervision and freely. The court is inside school gates, so unavailable outside school hours (prevent damage by other users). Natural school surroundings are used. Most students cycle to school. |
Competencies |
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Boonekamp, G.M.M.; Dierx, J.A.J.; Jansen, E. Shaping Physical Activity through Facilitating Student Agency in Secondary Schools in the Netherlands. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 9028. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19159028
Boonekamp GMM, Dierx JAJ, Jansen E. Shaping Physical Activity through Facilitating Student Agency in Secondary Schools in the Netherlands. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(15):9028. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19159028
Chicago/Turabian StyleBoonekamp, Gwendolijn M. M., John A. J. Dierx, and Erik Jansen. 2022. "Shaping Physical Activity through Facilitating Student Agency in Secondary Schools in the Netherlands" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 15: 9028. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19159028
APA StyleBoonekamp, G. M. M., Dierx, J. A. J., & Jansen, E. (2022). Shaping Physical Activity through Facilitating Student Agency in Secondary Schools in the Netherlands. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(15), 9028. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19159028