Old Story with a New Twist: Applying Decision Theory to Advance Understanding of the Negative Socialization Cycle of Physical Education Teachers

in Kinesiology Review

Click name to view affiliation

James D. Wyant
Search for other papers by James D. Wyant in
Current site
Google Scholar
PubMed
Close
and
Kristi N. Wyant
Search for other papers by Kristi N. Wyant in
Current site
Google Scholar
PubMed
Close
Restricted access

In recent years, the physical education (PE) profession has been forced to confront a plethora of issues, from the demise of teacher education programs to the loss of programming in the K–12 context. Calls for change and a time of introspection have been prompted by this climate. The impetus for change has long been a staple of PE discourse. Occupational socialization theory, which describes the forces that shape the decisions and behaviors of physical education teachers, offers insight on the change narrative. Emerging from the results of occupational socialization research are myriad negative issues that highlight a perplexing problem—some PE teachers have the propensity to make irrational decisions. The purpose of this article is to apply decision theory as a means to critically examine issues that have emerged from the negative socialization cycle of PE teachers. Beyond connecting theories, suggestions will be provided to improve the decision-making of PE professionals.

J.D. Wyant and K.N. Wyant are with the Department of Health, Exercise, and Sport Sciences, University of the Pacific, California.

  • Collapse
  • Expand
All Time Past Year Past 30 Days
Abstract Views 1933 770 0
Full Text Views 8 4 0
PDF Downloads 4 2 0