Deakin University
Browse

One teacher’s experience of teaching physical education and another school subject: an inter-role conflict?

journal contribution
posted on 2018-01-01, 00:00 authored by Cassandra IannucciCassandra Iannucci, Ann MacPhail
Purpose: This study was situated within a longitudinal study of 5 teachers examining the realities of teaching physical education by determining the impact of individual dispositions and contextual factors on the career trajectories of postprimary physical education teachers in Ireland (Iannucci & MacPhail, 2017). One of these participants, Jane, was examined in this study to gain a greater understanding of the realities and tensions experienced by a postprimary teacher enacting 2 distinct sets of role expectations when teaching physical education and another school subject concurrently. Method: Data reported in this article were collected through a semistructured interview and living graph. An interpretative framework was used for analysis, assessing Jane’s perceived meanings of the identified critical incidents in relation to role theory. Results: Teachers timetabled with physical education and another subject concurrently may be expected to navigate and negotiate 2 distinctly different roles within the school community causing difficulty in assuming both roles simultaneously. Short narratives were used to convey 2 themes: (a) role prioritization and (b) role performance. Conclusion: The study results suggest that the already complex and multifaceted role of a school teacher (Richards, Templin, Levesque-Bristol, & Blankenship, 2014) seems to be further complicated when teachers are tasked with simultaneously teaching physical education and another school subject. With the presence of a role conflict management strategy such as role prioritization (Stryker, 1968), one can presume that teachers who are tasked with teaching physical education and another school subject may experience some level of role conflict.

History

Journal

Research quarterly for exercise and sport

Volume

89

Pagination

235-245

Location

Abingdon, Eng.

ISSN

0270-1367

eISSN

2168-3824

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2018, SHAPE America

Issue

2

Publisher

Taylor & Francis