posted on 2011-02-01, 14:50authored byHayley F. Fitzgerald
This thesis explores young peoples' experiences of physical education and sport
and considers the ways in which these experiences contribute to identity formation
and understandings of self. Ten young disabled people attending two secondary
schools in the Midlands of England participated in a series of focus group
discussions and completed free-time diaries. In this study, I focus on the insights
of young disabled people as much physical education and sports research has
failed to account for the insights of these young people. Theoretically, I draw on
social and medical model understandings of disability and extend these
understandings by employing Pierre Bourdieu's conceptual tools. In particular,
these tools bridge the structure/agency dichotomy found within medical and social
model understandings of disability.
The data generated from this study reveals multifaceted relations between school,
physical education, sport, the family, friends and role models. Within and between
these spheres, young disabled people begin to understand themselves and the
position and meaning of physical education and sport in relation to their lives.
Within a school context, it is evident that a paradigm of normativity prevails and
is expressed through informal and formal discursive practices. Indeed, the
physical education habitus serves to affirm this normative presence and is
manifest through conceptions of ability that recognise and value certain
characteristics and competencies more than others. In this context, students
measured themselves, and perceived they were measured by others, against a
mesomorphic ideal. In addition, masculinity was expressed in a manner that
valued competitive and aggressive forms of activity. Within physical education,
value was also placed on high levels of motoric competence. For the focus group
students, difference is embodied within physical education and serves to reinforce
wider practices within school that distinguish disabled students as different from
other students.
Beyond a school context, this study explores students' understandings of their
free-time experiences and, in particular, free-time sport. Although students had
different experiences of free time, it is clear that this sphere of life is an important site for understanding and positioning themselves in relation to others. Indeed,
there are similarities between free time and school (physical) education in relation
to the ways in which normative values associated with the body and conceptions
of performance prevail. For a small number of students, it appears that the family
habitus has disrupted these normative values and constructed disability and sport
positively. This study also highlights the limited extent to which different sites of
participation and mediators interrelate in order to support any kind of continuity or
progression in sport. Although the key mediator within multiple sites seem to be
parents, their support remained isolated to specific issues within sites rather than
providing support between sites.
Taken together, these findings reveal a number of substantive issues that have
emerged from this study, including the role schools and physical education play in
reproducing social inequalities, disability as a fluid and contradictory construct
and the notion of complex sporting identities. This thesis concludes by discussing
the implications of this study in relation to researching with young disabled
people, the practice of physical education and the provision of disability sport
opportunities. This study demonstrates not only the complexities of identity
formation but also the fluid position that disability has within this process.