Developmental Physical Education for All Children, Fourth Edition, is now automatically packaged with an online subscription access code for a 6-month subscription to the Journal of Teaching Physical Education (JTPE). With the inclusion of the code, students will have access to the latest scholarly articles on physical education.
JTPE features research articles based on classroom and laboratory studies, descriptive and survey studies, summary and review articles, and discussion of current topics of interest to physical educators at every level.
The text Developmental Physical Education for All Children, Fourth Edition, has been thoroughly updated and revised by world-renowned authors David L. Gallahue and Frances Cleland Donnelly. It provides both the sound philosophical foundation and the tools required to build and improve solid programs that benefit all students. Parts I, II, and III (“The Learner,” “The Teacher,” “The Developmental Program”) present background information that is essential for successful teaching. Parts IV, V, and VI (“The Skill Themes,” “The Content Areas,” “The Program Strands”) focus on developmental movement experiences for preschool and elementary school children.
The CD-ROM accompanying the text is packed with lesson plans, assessment sheets, and worksheets that are ready to use and teacher-tested. Forget about purchasing a separate lesson book—all the practical tools future teachers need for teaching specific developmental physical education lessons can be found in the textbook.
This package prepares future teachers to teach physical education using a student-focused, developmentally appropriate approach. Students will learn how to use developmental games, dance, and gymnastics to teach fundamental movement skills and concepts that center on what’s individually appropriate for each student according to motor, cognitive, and affective development.
Preface
Acknowledgments
Part I The Learner
Chapter 1 An Overview of Developmental Physical Education
Chapter 2 Childhood Growth and Motor Development
Chapter 3 Movement Skill Acquisition
Chapter 4 Physical Activity and Fitness Enhancement
Chapter 5 Cognitive Learning
Chapter 6 Affective Growth
Chapter 7 Children With Disabilities
Part II The Teacher
Chapter 8 Effective Teaching: Skills, Responsibilities, Choices
Chapter 9 Facilitating Learning: Positive Discipline and Classroom Management
Chapter 10 Teaching Styles: Connecting With the Learner
Chapter 11 Planning for Success: Skill Themes and Lesson Planning
Chapter 12 Assessing Progress: Motor, Fitness, and Physical Activity Assessment
Chapter 13 Advocacy: Educating, Communicating, Motivating
Part III The Developmental Program
Chapter 14 The Developmental Curriculum
Chapter 15 The Physical Education Content
Chapter 16 Movement Skill Development Through Movement Concept Learning
Chapter 17 Safety Considerations and Legal Liability
Part IV The Skill Themes
Chapter 18 Fundamental Stability Skill Themes
Chapter 19 Fundamental Locomotor and Non-Locomotor Skill Themes
Chapter 20 Fundamental Manipulative Skill Themes
Part V The Content Areas
Chapter 21 Developmental Games
Chapter 22 Developmental Dance
Chapter 23 Developmental Gymnastics
Part VI The Program Strands
Chapter 24 Developing the Active Child
Chapter 25 Developing the Thinking Child
Chapter 26 Developing the Feeling Child
Glossary
References
Index
About the Authors
Textbook for elementary physical education and elementary education majors and faculty. Resource for physical education teachers and administrators.
David L. Gallahue, EdD, is dean of the school of health, physical education, and recreation at Indiana University. A former elementary school PE teacher, he has been a university professor for more than 30 years and has focused his career on children's motor development and movement skill learning.
As owner and director of Challengers Day Camp and after-school program for 20 years, he worked with children, trained beginning teachers, and experimented with the developmental approach. He was chair of both the Council on Physical Education for Children (COPEC) and the Motor Development Academy of the National Association for Sport and Physical Education (NASPE). He was elected to the American Academy of Kinesiology and Physical Education and the North American Society for HPERD Professionals in recognition for his work with children and extensive influence in the field of children's physical education and motor development. He was recently recognized with an honorary professorship from the Chengdu Institute of Physical Education in China for his international efforts on behalf of children.
Dr. Gallahue earned his master's degree from Purdue University and his doctorate from Temple University.
Frances Cleland Donnelly, PED, is associate professor and assistant chair of the health and physical education teacher certification program at West Chester University. She has taught elementary physical education in private and public schools for 10 years and continues to teach children through her university position and research.
Dr. Donnelly served in COPEC from 1999 to 2002. She earned her master's and doctorate degrees in motor development, adapted physical education, and child development from Indiana University. She has published many articles in refereed journals related to critical thinking in K-12 physical education, assessment, dance, interdisciplinary teaching, and teaching methodology.