PE Lessons Put Girls Off Sport, Suggests Research

The Huffington Post UK  |  By Posted: 2/05/2012 10:14 Updated: 3/05/2012 14:39

Pe Lessons
Girls are put off sport for life by PE lessons, suggests research

PE lessons are putting girls off sport and making them feel self-conscious or uncomfortable, new research suggests.

Sport is too competitive, with many young girls unhappy at the activities on offer in schools, according to a study by the Women's Sport and Fitness Foundation (WSFF). Just under half (45%) think sport is too competitive, while over a third say their PE teacher only pays attention to pupils who are good at sport.

The foundation is warning girls in the UK are not getting enough exercise, and schools are vital in encouraging them to be more active.


James Bunting
PE puts everyone off exercise. It should be a choice what you do, how you do it, and when you do it.


Their report draws on research conducted by the Institute of Youth Sport at Loughborough University, which asked 1,500 pupils for their views on fitness.

The findings show that just over half of girls (51%) are put off physical activity by their experiences of school sport and PE lessons.

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The research also revealed that girls' attitudes to PE are led by their peers, and that many feel uncomfortable taking part.

Just under half (48%) of the girls questioned said that "getting sweaty is not feminine" while almost a third of boys questioned said that girls who are sporty are not feminine.


Lauren Bravo
It wasn't all bad - and I invented "sitty-down badminton" during high school PE.

Nearly three-fifths (57%) of girls agreed that girls drop out of doing physical activity because their friends do.

"Being popular is not defined by being 'sporty' for girls - but it is for boys," the report says.

"Boys receive more encouragement to be sporty from their friends."

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The foundation's report also reveals that nearly half of the least active girls say they do not like the activities they are offered in PE, compared with 26% of the most active.

Over three-quarters (76%) of girls agreed that female pupils are self-conscious about their bodies, with around a quarter saying they feel their body is on show in PE and this makes them like the subject less.


Sweetpea
Totally agree. Too competative and if you weren't the best athlete nobody could be bothered with you.

WSFF is writing to head teachers and heads of PE to offer them tips on how to make PE more appealing to female students.


BLOGS:

"Introduce bloody Zumba - everyone else is doing it", says HuffPost's Alice Vincent.

Lauren Bravo: Why PE for girls is an issue worth sweating over.

The foundation's chief executive Sue Tibballs said: "It is well-known that school children are less active than they should be. This problem is particularly severe for girls.

"We need schools and the government to urgently address this issue, and create policies that will keep our children fit and healthy. The priority needs to be getting all children active, not just focusing on the sporty ones."

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11:26 AM on 12/07/2012
I really think it is in no way about competition, exercise is good for us, whether we are males or females. I wasn't really keen to P.E. class when I was on school, but later on I actually acknowledged it was helpful for me, to win a girl, that was the only competitive part about it, but the healthy benefits were much higher than the competition. People who has been a little bit overweight commiting to exercise has been able to live a healthier life, etc.
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Ben Wilson
What's the story mourning Tories?
01:28 AM on 05/09/2012
I think they put a lot of people off. There was any number of things I enjoyed during PEm Orienteering, Basketball, Baseball, Volleyball, Tennis, but we hardly ever did them. While I;m oddly good at Rugby, there's nothing like how being a the band geek that's bad a at Football to make you feel inadequte and unmanly! The changing room experience isn't exactly great either. Being gay and not having the best figure, made it nightmare of a time! Body issues and unwanted arosal! I used to skive PE ALL the time.
04:23 PM on 05/06/2012
Absolutely school PE puts you off sport. Especially being told you are 'lazy[ and 'just not trying' when you can't do something. Support and coaching are only for those who are naturally good -is there any other subject where this would be acceptable?. Also the clothes are toitally unsuitable for British weather and positively designed to make you feel self-conscious, those stupid short gym skirts!
In the end I told my school I would not do athletics ever/ What could they do do me - turns out nothing. (Probably helped that I was on track for university entrance)
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queenoferne
04:06 PM on 05/02/2012
Compulsory games in my boarding school put me off any sport that involves chasing a ball. Even the sound of them on TV depresses me. Water sports, however, are fine possibly because I associate them with holiday time.
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Altern8
03:57 PM on 05/02/2012
Trying to make teenage girls exercise is like pushing water uphill.
The whole "I don't wanna get all sweaty" thing is just laziness, I never believed that even the dimmest girls don't see the link between sweat=exercise=fitness.

That said girls awkwardness over their bodies must be respected and there's no inherent need for regimented activities and humiliating uniforms, lord knows there's enough cool sportswear out there. (But it must NOT be allowed to turn into a "who's got the most expensive sports gear" competition).
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Tracy Fortune
Geek, mother, fair & compassionate ;^)
01:30 PM on 05/02/2012
I hated PE as a girl. When I say "hated"- I mean I would rather fail my grade than do PE. Is that enough to draw attention to this?

Boys just love competing. Later, they compete (in life or for girls) by getting a car or truck as an extension of their d*ck.

If you are a girl who is *non-athletic, you are screwed. You will hate your entire school career, 1- 6 (at least). No one will care if you are intellectual and committed- you must run & jump to be taken seriously.

*Even though athletics will not help you achieve any goal outside athletics (& PLEASE do not go on about how team people exceed- it's B.S.).
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Altern8
03:50 PM on 05/02/2012
"Boys ... by getting a car or truck as an extension of their d*ck."
I don't know any men who confuse their cars and their genitals, cars are bought because people like to drive or they feel the need for them. Genitals are also fun but a completely different sort.
Hope this helps clear that up for you.
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Tracy Fortune
Geek, mother, fair & compassionate ;^)
04:01 PM on 05/02/2012
...you must have been asleep or otherwise distracted for the past half or so century then...I can't claim coining this phenomenon. It's a known-quantity since forever- but thanks for playing...
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Ppenguinator
Life's too imprtant to be taken seriously.
11:18 PM on 05/02/2012
"Boys just love competing"

A bit of a generalisation? I'm male and have always hated competing.
01:13 PM on 05/02/2012
So what about equality the females keep banging on about?

They \re always saying they are the same as males so why should they have different PE lessons?
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vividrick
I came, I saw...I had a cup of tea!
12:49 PM on 05/02/2012
It's puts them off when certain teachers get off on humiliating them, boys & girls! I know coz I seen it happen many a time.
03:23 PM on 05/06/2012
I hated PE at school, never took part in a Sports Day since the age of 11, and am firmly convinced that to be a PE teacher you have to have a particularly nasty kind of sadistic streak.
However, the compulsory PE lessons at my grammar school did stand me in very good stead in later life... the deviousness that I had to develop in order to get out of as much PE as possible came in very handy when navigating my way through office politics.
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vividrick
I came, I saw...I had a cup of tea!
03:39 AM on 05/07/2012
I loved PE, but while we put kids into sets for various subjects, they didn't do that with PE & games, therefore the slowest & out of shape kids competed against the more robust, and the teachers showed little or no remorse when the former were regularly embarressed. Girls loved PE as much as boys in my experience, I don't see the reasoning in the article as valid.
11:36 AM on 05/02/2012
Ahhhhhhhh...stop blaming the education system! An hour a week of exercise is not the be all and end all. Take some responsibility for your kids at home and get them off of their *&£$%£$ Xbox!

I enjoyed some P.E. and disliked other bits. I was not necessarily good at all of it. But I did sport and other forms of physical activity outside of school because I was encouraged to do so by my parents. I do the same with my daughter, she doesn't enjoy P.E. at school, but she enjoys riding her bike and her dance lessons and going to Brownies. On top of that, it doesn't cost a lot (if anything) to walk to the shop with her, or walk to feed the ducks with her, and its a perfectly acceptable physical activity.

Stop expecting the schools and the government to do everything for you and do something yourselves.

Allowing schools to pander to impressions CHILDREN have thanks to the media is not helpful to anyone. Teach your children that healthy and skinny are two separate things. Teach your children some self-esteem. Teach your children that the media manipulate what they see. Suddenly this won't be an issue anymore.
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Valksy
civis mundi sum
11:24 AM on 05/02/2012
Getting sweaty is not feminine? Really? How do these girls think that the people they idolise get fitter? OK, it is easier with a personal trainer and the best equipment money can buy. But all that aside, you have to sweat. People like Lady Gaga make no secret about how they are taking exercise and working on their body, perhaps others should join in.

And I would love girls growing up to get the message that it is their body, they should do what they want with it and not worry about what boys think they should do. If you love sport, be sporty and who gives a tinker's cuss what anyone - male or female - thinks. Raising children to be sheep serves no useful purpose at all.

That aside, my PE classes did put me off. Not only did the girls have to do nonsense like "music and movement" while the boys played basketball, but it was clear that the gym teacher got a kick out of tormenting those who were not "good enough."
11:14 AM on 05/02/2012
I was certainly put off sports as a boy in the 70's, as my PE teachers seemed to go out of their way to make exercise as unpleasant as possible - insisting that outside activities be reserved for freezing, miserable days, sneering openly at less able students and encouraging homophobic bullying of any student not among their sporty 'favourites'.

Happiest days of your life?
10:36 AM on 05/02/2012
That's why cheerleading for girls during PE lessons is such a good idea!

Everyone can be involved, including those who are maybe overweight, inflexible, unfit & so on. I've found from years of experience & speaking to P.E teachers that cheerleading really does engage students who don't normally flourish during those lessons.

Personally I absolutely HATED p.e at school! Now I love being able to show that cheerleading is a sporting options for girls within schools that is 100% inclusive, whether you're a 'sporty' person or not. Also, contrary to the stereotype, there is no 'prancing around' with pom poms!
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Valksy
civis mundi sum
11:26 AM on 05/02/2012
When people hear "cheer leader" they think of prancing about on the sidelines, urging people to look for up-skirt action while you hero worship those on the pitch who are actually GOOD at something. I cannot think of anything more confidence destroying. And I would have refused.
01:01 PM on 05/02/2012
I'm sorry that you are basing your opinions on an old-school stereotype which is not what cheer is about these days at all.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lA48wpqbHG4&sns=fb
09:11 PM on 05/03/2012
That's why they should do cheer in schools!! to teach boys and girls that its not prancing about with pom poms, that its an actual sport and an amazing work out. There is never a cheer session when i don't come home feeling happy and fitter. It also teaches team work because everyone relies on each other. I can't think of a better sport to be doing! and i know many of my friends would love to cheer in school.
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hearthammer
If left is right and right is wrong, decide!
10:34 AM on 05/02/2012
Look, some kids are gonna be put off by ANYTHING that forces them to get off their butts!
10:25 AM on 05/02/2012
I HATED it.And I'm a boy.