1. Introduction: Current Trends, Debates and Discussion in Physical Education Teacher Education. 2. Understanding Trans-locality, Diversity and Social Justice. 3. Mobilising Trans-local Cultural Capital in Physical Education in Schooling. 4. Repositioning the Others in Physical Education Teacher Education in a Trans-located World. 5. Critical Pedagogy and Wayfinding in Trans-local Learning in Physical Education Teacher Education. 6. Being and Becoming Critical Pedagogues: Habitus Transformation in Trans-local Learning. 7. Diversity Work Starts Within Ourselves. 8. Enduring Challenges and Possible Directions in a Trans-located World in Physical Education Teacher Education.
Bonnie Pang is Lecturer at the University of Bath, United Kingdom, Adjunct Fellow at the Institute for Culture and Society, Western Sydney University, Australia, and Marie Sklodowska-Curie Fellow (2019-2020).
Tony Rossi is Professor and Deputy Dean in the School of Health Sciences, Western Sydney University, Australia. He is also the Discipline Lead for Sport, Health, and Exercise Science and author of Workplace Learning in Physical Education (2015).
"Both tacit and increasingly explicit acknowledgement of hegemonic
White heterosexual patriarchy in Physical Education Teacher
Education (PETE) is made in literature spanning 50 years, yet PETE
practices at various levels of education remain slow to respond to
this critical scholarship. In both the United Kingdom and
Australia, there are fewer than 20 women Professors in PETE and far
fewer Professors with non-White ancestry. Pang and Rossi’s book
provides the theoretical resources to think differently about why
the last half century of social justice research and critical work
has failed to substantially diversify PETE. It is not a book of
despair but a powerful exposé that can sustain critical scholars in
PETE around the globe, showing how to intensify and amplify the
voices and experiences, and support the careers, of hyper-diverse
PE students into PETE."
Dr Sue Whatman, President of the Australian Council for Health,
Physical Education and Recreation (ACHPER), Senior Lecturer in
Health, Physical Education and Sport Pedagogy, Griffith University,
Australia."Pang and Rossi’s compelling and nuanced exploration of
social justice, diversity and inclusion reminds us that many
(trainee) teachers are often underprepared to enter increasingly
diverse Physical Education Environments. In this engaging text, the
authors bring a new perspective to the table, revealing the
potential of the conceptual framework of trans-locality. Their
enquiry into the experiences of higher education academics,
university students and schoolteachers in Australia and the UK
provides rich insights into how pedagogues perceive their own work
in relation to social justice in PE. This focus along with the
authors suggestions for transformation and future directions
provides an essential contribution for those working in the area of
PETE and critical pedagogy which will no doubt open up important
conversations about what social justice and diversity mean in a
trans-located world."
Dr Emma Rich, Professor in Physical Activity and Health Pedagogy,
University of Bath, UK"Pang and Rossi have compiled a comprehensive
and astute investigation that extends the discussion of matters
that are as timely now as ever. Readers will find an extensive data
set and theoretically sound analysis underpinned by trans-locality
that for example, gives voice to how university faculty and
students have navigated their lives as teacher educators. The
authors’ labours have resulted in a work that provides much needed
insight into this area and also poses complex questions that will
undoubtedly require further intellectual attention – in other
words, quality scholarship."
Dr Bryan McCullick, Professor in Health and Physical Education,
University of Georgia, USA."In this alluring book, Pang and Rossi
present a refreshing take on the role of space, place, and
globalization to address diversity in physical education. They
infuse the concept of trans-locality into previous conversations
around social justice, diversity, and inclusion to explore the
emplaced narratives of teachers, teacher educators, and teacher
candidates. In the world Pang and Rossi encourage us to embark
upon, diverse bodies and spaces come to matter in relation to each
other. Any person engaging with this book will never think about
their practices in the same (repetitive) way."
Dr Dillon Landi, Lecturer in Education, University of Strathclyde,
UK."This book is stimulating and innovative and provides an
interdisciplinary theoretical analysis that highlight a collective
understanding of social justice and physical education issues in
race and ethnicity. It is a formidable text for those entering the
field wishing to understand the trans-located world and the
challenges we face in Physical Education Teacher Education (PETE)
and PE."
Dr Shrehan Lynch, Senior Lecturer in Secondary Education,
University of East London, UK.
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