| Literature DB >> 27365029 |
Lowri C Edwards1, Anna S Bryant2, Richard J Keegan3, Kevin Morgan2, Anwen M Jones2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The concept of physical literacy has stimulated increased research attention in recent years-being deployed in physical education, sport participation, and the promotion of physical activity. Independent research groups currently operationalize the construct differently.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 27365029 PMCID: PMC5215133 DOI: 10.1007/s40279-016-0560-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sports Med ISSN: 0112-1642 Impact factor: 11.136
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram showing the process of study identification and selection [46]. PRISMA preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses
Physical literacy hierarchical structure, including core categories, subthemes and higher-order themes
| Core categoriesa | Subthemes | Higher-order themes |
|---|---|---|
| Confidence (26) | Affective | Properties of physical literacy |
| Motivation (23) | ||
| Self-esteem (4) | ||
| Knowledge and understanding of activities (16) | Cognitive | |
| Knowledge and understanding of healthy and active lifestyles (13) | ||
| Value and take responsibility for physical activity (2) | ||
| Movement capacities (22) | Physical capabilities | |
| Motor skill competence (18) | ||
| Physical competence (12) | ||
| Fundamental movement skills (8) | ||
| Purposeful physical pursuits (6) | ||
| Throughout the lifespan (19) | Progression/developmental pathway | |
| Unique journey (7) | ||
| Long-Term Athlete Development model (5) | ||
| Children (13) | Target audience | |
| All can develop physical literacy (3) | ||
| Importance for adults (3) | ||
| Read/interact with environment (14) | Holistic concept | |
| Movement with poise and economy (5) | ||
| Health literacy (3) | Related constructs | |
| Aesthetic literacy (1) | ||
| Develop whole person (15) | Ontological assumptions | Philosophical underpinning |
| Embodied (16) | ||
| Monism (16) | ||
| Human disposition (8) | ||
| Phenomenology (8) | Epistemological assumptions | |
| Existentialism (7) | ||
| Meaningful experience (5) | Pedagogical implications | |
| Pragmatic reality (3) | ||
| Not a pedagogical model (2) | ||
| Physical activity (22) | Behavioral characteristics | Associations and relationships |
| Health behaviors (13) | ||
| Engage, enthuse and enjoy (13) | Psychological, social and attitudinal | |
| Support from significant others (10) | ||
| Cognitive/academic performance (4) | ||
| Physical education (38) | Contextual | |
| Sport sector (8) |
aNumbers in parentheses represent the number of papers that referred to the core categories apparent, of a possible 50 papers
| This paper is the first to provide a systematic review of core attributes of the physical literacy construct, including the defining properties of physical literacy, the philosophical foundations and the theoretical associations of the construct. |
| An implication for theory development and research is the need for transparency and tolerance with different approaches to physical literacy. |
| Implications for applied practice include ensuring clarity of theoretical descriptions and phrases so that these can be translated clearly into a practical setting. |