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Health and Physical Education

Journal

2017

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Articles 151 - 170 of 170

Full-Text Articles in Education

High School Student Concussion Recovery Program: Teacher Involvement In Student Academic Transitions To Classroom And To Sports, Brittany K. Diego Apr 2017

High School Student Concussion Recovery Program: Teacher Involvement In Student Academic Transitions To Classroom And To Sports, Brittany K. Diego

Scholarship and Engagement in Education

Many symptoms of concussions can substantially interfere with the cognitive abilities and skills students use in school. Although students may have similar symptoms they experience concussions differently. Students returning to the classroom from a concussion often have different needs and abilities.

Research shows that a formal, individualized protocol to treat suspected concussions, both academically and physically, is vital to the successful recovery of each student. Much research is available on concussions for professional athletes, specifically related to recovery and returning to their sport. However, there is little research about high school students regarding concussions. Concussion recovery programs for high school …


Parental Perceptions Of Water Competence And Drowning Risk For Themselves And Their Children In An Open Water Environment, Teresa Stanley, Kevin Moran Dr Feb 2017

Parental Perceptions Of Water Competence And Drowning Risk For Themselves And Their Children In An Open Water Environment, Teresa Stanley, Kevin Moran Dr

International Journal of Aquatic Research and Education

Little is known about people’s perceptions of how much swimming competency is required to provide protection from drowning, especially in open water environments where most drowning incidents occurs. This study reports on parental perceptions (n = 309) of swimming competency of themselves and their children, and parents beliefs on their safety when swimming in open water. Most parents (58%) considered themselves good/very good swimmers, although more than half (55%) considered that they could swim 25 m or less. Most parents (87%) reported that their children could swim, with more than one half (52%) believing that their child’s swimming competency …


Understanding Contributing Factors To Child Drownings In Public Pools In Australia: A Review Of National Coronial Records, Lauren A. Petrass Dr, Jennifer Blitvich Feb 2017

Understanding Contributing Factors To Child Drownings In Public Pools In Australia: A Review Of National Coronial Records, Lauren A. Petrass Dr, Jennifer Blitvich

International Journal of Aquatic Research and Education

This study examined the incidence and circumstances associated with child drowning in public pools in Australia; and identified the frequency and nature of coroners’ recommendations. Retrospective case-series analysis of child (aged 0-10 years) unintentional drowning deaths in public pools were conducted based on Coronial data. A total of 12 child drownings were identified. A lack of supervision was recognized as the key contributing factor in 92% of cases, with the caregiver responsible for multiple children (83%); older children supervising younger children (17%); and a busy pool environment (25%) consistently linked with in-adequate supervision. To address drownings in public pools it …


Effect Of In-Water Scuba Diving Activities On Response Time In Recreational Divers, Christopher R. Kovacs Ph.D., Trevor D. Paulsen M.S. Feb 2017

Effect Of In-Water Scuba Diving Activities On Response Time In Recreational Divers, Christopher R. Kovacs Ph.D., Trevor D. Paulsen M.S.

International Journal of Aquatic Research and Education

The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between the performance of in-water scuba diving training activities and simple motor response time. Twenty-four students enrolled in a scuba course had their motor response times measured before and after a one hour training session. Pre- and post-dive response times were measured using an iPad application. Additionally, students were asked to complete a dive history questionnaire to determine their diving experience and health history. Statistical analysis indicated a significant training effect on response time in the recreational scuba divers F (1.00, 23.00) p =.033. The results of this study suggest …


A Model To Predict Student Failure In The First Year Of The Undergraduate Medical Curriculum, Gerard J.A. Baars, Theo Stijnen, Ted A.W. Splinter Feb 2017

A Model To Predict Student Failure In The First Year Of The Undergraduate Medical Curriculum, Gerard J.A. Baars, Theo Stijnen, Ted A.W. Splinter

Health Professions Education

Purpose: To develop a model for the early and reliable prediction of students who fail to pass the first year of the undergraduate medical curriculum within two years after the start. Method: 1819 medical students of five consecutive cohorts were included. By logistic regression analyses, predictions for failure in the first-year curriculum were made at 0, 4, 6, 8, 10 and 12 months. Predictive variables included pre-admission variables such as age, gender, pre-university education GPA, the way students were selected, and post-admission variables such as number of credits obtained, degree of participation in exams, and exam success rate. Variables were …


Clinical Capability Self-Appraisal As Indicative Of Preparedness For Future Medical Practice. A Graduates' Perspective, Afsheen Zafar, Ahmed Rehman Feb 2017

Clinical Capability Self-Appraisal As Indicative Of Preparedness For Future Medical Practice. A Graduates' Perspective, Afsheen Zafar, Ahmed Rehman

Health Professions Education

Purpose: Pakistan is experiencing a wave of change in the undergraduate medical curriculum. The changes have led to emergence of an outcomes-based curriculum. However the extent to which an outcomes-based curriculum prepares the medical graduates for clinical practice has not been well studied. The aim of the present study was therefore to identify perception of the medical graduates of the extent to which an outcomes-based curriculum in Pakistan has prepared them for hospital practice. Methods: In September 2015, recent graduates of Islamic International Medical College in Pakistan were asked to fill in the modified Clinical Capability Questionnaire to assess their …


Reflection In Medical Diagnosis: A Literature Review, Silvia Mamede, Henk G. Schmidt Feb 2017

Reflection In Medical Diagnosis: A Literature Review, Silvia Mamede, Henk G. Schmidt

Health Professions Education

Purpose: Reflection in medical diagnosis has been said to prevent errors by minimizing flaws in clinical reasoning. This claim, however, has been much disputed. While some studies show reflective reasoning to improve diagnostic performance, others find it to add nothing. This paper presents a narrative review of the literature on reflection in medical diagnosis aimed at addressing two questions: (1) how reflective reasoning has been conceived in this literature; and (2) what is the effect of different forms of reflective reasoning on diagnostic performance. Method: We searched PubMed and Web of Science for papers published until June 2016 and identified …


Effect Of Repeated/Spaced Formative Assessments On Medical School Final Exam Performance, Edward K. Chang, Paul F. Wimmers Feb 2017

Effect Of Repeated/Spaced Formative Assessments On Medical School Final Exam Performance, Edward K. Chang, Paul F. Wimmers

Health Professions Education

Formative assessments, especially if spaced, encourage effective study habits such as retesting. The individual and combined effect of weekly formative assessments and cumulative assessments on final exam performance was studied. Methods: Students were placed into 6 groups by weekly formative assessment performance and practice exam utilization/ performance. Students who scored below the median on weekly assessments comprised groups 1/3/5. Groups 2/4/6 scored above the median. Groups 1/2 did not use the practice exam. Groups 3/4 scored below the median on the practice exam while Groups 5/6 scored above. Multiple comparisons were made using ANCOVA. Results: Adjusted analysis showed weekly assessment …


The Arrival Of Neuroscience To Diagnostic Reasoning: Four Issues To Keep In Mind, Jerome I. Rotgans, Lucy V. Rosby, Naomi Low-Beer Feb 2017

The Arrival Of Neuroscience To Diagnostic Reasoning: Four Issues To Keep In Mind, Jerome I. Rotgans, Lucy V. Rosby, Naomi Low-Beer

Health Professions Education

With the rapidly increasing access to brain imaging facilities, we are potentially at the dawn of a new era for understanding diagnostic reasoning. Although, this may sound bold, and appears to echo the many claims made in other disciplines, we will highlight in this paper why neuroscience can be a useful tool for advancing diagnostic reasoning research. But first some cautionary notes. Fact is that all too often the high expectations of neuroscience are not met, such as the expectation in “educational neuroscience” that the insights of the brain will transform classroom teaching and learning.1 There is currently no compelling …


What We Think We Know About The Tutor In Problem-Based Learning, Judith C. Williams, Deborah J. Paltridge Feb 2017

What We Think We Know About The Tutor In Problem-Based Learning, Judith C. Williams, Deborah J. Paltridge

Health Professions Education

This purpose of this brief paper is to provide those new to problem-based learning with a summary of the key findings of research conducted into the beliefs and practices of tutors who facilitator this approach to learning. Although findings from the research do differ there are many areas of agreement. There is general consensus that effective problem-based learning tutors know their subject content and are able to communicate their knowledge in ways that students can comprehend; that they are able to judge when and to what extent to intervene in student learning; and enter the learning environment with an intent …


Peer-Assisted Learning Associated With Team-Based Learning In Dental Education, Sausan Al Kawas, Hossam Hamdy Feb 2017

Peer-Assisted Learning Associated With Team-Based Learning In Dental Education, Sausan Al Kawas, Hossam Hamdy

Health Professions Education

Its value could be enhanced if combined with a student centered learning strategy such as team-based learning. Purpose: The aim of this pilot study is to evaluate the impact of peer-assisted learning associated with team-based learning on the learning experience of dental students. Method: Forty-two dental students participated in peer-assisted learning associated with team-based learning activities and 6 of them took the role of tutors in the team-based learning sessions. A structured on-line questionnaire was sent to 42 students to evaluate their perception regarding the impact of peer-assisted learning associated with team-based learning on their learning experience. Thirty-eight (90.5%) participants …


Development And Validation Of The Motivation For Tutoring Questionnaire In Problem-Based Learning Programs, Salah Eldin Kassab, Nahla Hassan, Shimaa El-Araby, Abdel Halim Salem, Saleh Ali Alrebish, Ahmed S. Al-Amro, Hani A. Al-Shobaili, Hossam Hamdy Feb 2017

Development And Validation Of The Motivation For Tutoring Questionnaire In Problem-Based Learning Programs, Salah Eldin Kassab, Nahla Hassan, Shimaa El-Araby, Abdel Halim Salem, Saleh Ali Alrebish, Ahmed S. Al-Amro, Hani A. Al-Shobaili, Hossam Hamdy

Health Professions Education

Purpose: There are no published instruments, which measure tutor motivation for conducting small group tutorials in problembased learning programs. Therefore, we aimed to develop a motivation for tutoring questionnaire in problem-based learning (MTQ-PBL) and evaluate its construct validity.

Methods: The questionnaire included 28 items representing four constructs: tutoring self-efficacy (15 items), tutoring interest (6 items), tutoring value (4 items), and tutoring effort (3 items). Tutors (n¼158) from three problem-based medical schools in Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Bahrain rated their perceptions for each item on a 7-point Likert scale. Statistical analyses included examining the factor structure of the questionnaire, the differences …


Evaluating The Effectiveness Of Using Peer-Dialogue Assessment (Pda) For Improving Pre-Service Teachers' Perceived Confidence And Competence To Teach Physical Education, Narelle Eather, Nick Riley, Drew Miller, Bradley Jones Jan 2017

Evaluating The Effectiveness Of Using Peer-Dialogue Assessment (Pda) For Improving Pre-Service Teachers' Perceived Confidence And Competence To Teach Physical Education, Narelle Eather, Nick Riley, Drew Miller, Bradley Jones

Australian Journal of Teacher Education

Developing effective methods for improving student learning in higher education is a priority. Recent findings have shown that feedback on student work can effectively facilitate learning if students are engaged as active participants in the feedback cycle; where they seek, generate and use feedback in the form of dialogue. This novel study investigates the use of peer dialogue assessment as an assessment for learning tool used in an existing undergraduate physical education course. Our findings demonstrate that when thirty six undergraduate physical education students were provided with instruction and practice using peer dialogue assessment after consecutive teaching performances, they exhibit …


A Simulation Pedagogical Approach To Engaging Generalist Pre-Service Teachers In Physical Education Online: The Gopro Trial 1.0, Brendon P. Hyndman Jan 2017

A Simulation Pedagogical Approach To Engaging Generalist Pre-Service Teachers In Physical Education Online: The Gopro Trial 1.0, Brendon P. Hyndman

Australian Journal of Teacher Education

There has been a continuous increase in enrolments within teacher education programs in recent years delivered via online and external modes. Such levels of enrolment have raised discussion around the theory-practice nexus and whether pre-service teachers (PSTs) can optimally engage with practical learning components via online platforms. This paper provides insight into the potential and feasibility of using GoPro video technology as an innovation in online teacher education delivery of practical physical education (PE) classes. Upon completion of the university semester, qualitative data was collected detailing the generalist PSTs’ perceptions relating to the potential of using GoPro video footage to …


Criticality In Physical Education Teacher Education: Do Graduating Standards Constrain And Or Inhibit Curriculum Implementation, Ian Culpan Jan 2017

Criticality In Physical Education Teacher Education: Do Graduating Standards Constrain And Or Inhibit Curriculum Implementation, Ian Culpan

Australian Journal of Teacher Education

Over the last decade and a half, physical education curricula in New Zealand and Australia have had a strong socio-cultural-critical orientation, providing in depth opportunities for critical inquiry. This article suggests that trying to achieve a criticality maybe impeded and or constrained by present graduating teacher standards. In the discussion, it is highlighted that neither New Zealand nor Australia graduating teacher standards overtly suggest critical inquiry as a part of beginning teachers’ required knowledge, skills or dispositions. This could be a significant constraint on maximising the intent of the New Zealand and Australia physical education curricula. As a result, this …


Learning Styles And Personality Types Of Freshman Level Pre-Athletic Training Major Students, Marketa Schublova Jan 2017

Learning Styles And Personality Types Of Freshman Level Pre-Athletic Training Major Students, Marketa Schublova

Internet Journal of Allied Health Sciences and Practice

Purpose: The purpose of this study was to determine the preferred learning style and personality types of freshman-level pre-athletic training students. The secondary purpose was to identify any possible differences in learning styles and personality types of students admitted into the athletic training program versus those that were denied admission or changed their major. Methods: Data collection took place during a college introductory course over a period of seven years. Four hundred seventy-two freshmen (188 men, 284 women; average age 18.66 ± 0.87 years) considering athletic training as their major at a CAATE-accredited athletic training program participated in this …


Dimensions Of Professional Growth In Work-Related Teacher Education, Leena Aarto-Pesonen, Päivi Tynjälä Jan 2017

Dimensions Of Professional Growth In Work-Related Teacher Education, Leena Aarto-Pesonen, Päivi Tynjälä

Australian Journal of Teacher Education

This article conceptualises adult learners’ professional growth in a tailored, work-related, teacher-qualification programme in physical education. The study data consisted of the reflective-learning diaries of 20 adult learners during a 2-year tertiary and work-related teacher-qualification programme. The data were analysed using data-driven open coding analysis, which was conducted using the constant comparative method of the grounded theory approach. This article presents the horizontal dimensions (egocentric learner, researching professional and expert within society) and the vertical dimensions (transforming self-image, expanding professional self-expression and widening agency) of the adult learners’ multifaceted professional growth process. In addition, the article discusses pedagogical implications in …


Reducing The Rate Of Late Stage Breast Cancer Through Effective Health Communication: An Opinion Piece, Rachele Hendricks-Sturrup Jan 2017

Reducing The Rate Of Late Stage Breast Cancer Through Effective Health Communication: An Opinion Piece, Rachele Hendricks-Sturrup

Internet Journal of Allied Health Sciences and Practice

Purpose: Health and illness are traditionally characterized and treated differently across various ethnic groups, which encourages American health systems serving these diverse populations to explore culturally competent and safe ways to effectively reduce illness within such populations. Certain ethnic groups of women in the United States (US) bear greater risk of late stage breast cancer because of various circumstances, which include but are not limited to a lack of insurance or underinsurance and discomfort with and/or resentment toward the US healthcare system. The dominant culture and the social aspects of the modern American health system often and most favorably serve …


Missed School Days: A Correlational Study Between Children With Asthma And Presence Of School Nurses, Shea Brodeur, Caitlyn O’Connor, Rebekah Synowietz, Carrie Carson, Olubukola Goboze, Cierra Patterson Jan 2017

Missed School Days: A Correlational Study Between Children With Asthma And Presence Of School Nurses, Shea Brodeur, Caitlyn O’Connor, Rebekah Synowietz, Carrie Carson, Olubukola Goboze, Cierra Patterson

OUR Journal: ODU Undergraduate Research Journal

Currently, there is a lack of research on the relationship between full-time nurse presence in schools and absenteeism among school-aged children with asthma. The purpose of this paper is to determine the correlation between the amount of time school-aged children are absent and the amount of time a school nurse is absent. A nonexperimental quantitative descriptive correlational study will be conducted with 14 randomly selected participating schools in the Chesapeake public school district. Each school will receive a questionnaire inquiring about the number of asthmatic children enrolled in the school, number of absences of said children, weekly hours the school …


Perceived Social-Ecological Barriers Of Generalist Pre-Service Teachers Towards Teaching Physical Education: Findings From The Get-Pe Study, Brendon P. Hyndman Jan 2017

Perceived Social-Ecological Barriers Of Generalist Pre-Service Teachers Towards Teaching Physical Education: Findings From The Get-Pe Study, Brendon P. Hyndman

Australian Journal of Teacher Education

Identifying and understanding the perceptions of pre-service teachers (PSTs) is vital to informing teaching practices. The purpose of the ‘Generalist Entry into Teaching Physical Education’ (GET-PE) study was to investigate Australian generalist PSTs' perceptions of the barriers to teaching physical education (PE) classes. A social-ecological model framework (SEM) was uniquely applied as the conceptual framework for the GET-PE study to analyse, explore and understand the multiple levels of barriers perceived by the generalist PSTs. A myriad of SEM level barriers were perceived by the generalist PSTs (n=71) at the intrapersonal level (knowledge gaps, physical abilities, reduced confidence), interpersonal level (community …