Abstract

Purpose: Existing research suggests that students’ attitudes toward physical education are positive through Grade 5, but become less positive as grade levels increase; this research is, however, missing student voice. The purpose of this study was to further understand why students’ attitudes have been shown to decrease.Methods: Twenty-six focus group interviews (studentsN = 65) were conducted over 2 years to discover what was influencing attitudes from fifth to eighth grade.Results: Three themes emerged: (a) curriculum leads to decreases in student attitudes (subthemes repetitive and boring, an overemphasis on competition, and fitness testing activities—what’s the purpose and why am I on display?), (b) social factors impact attitude: sweating and changing, and (c) physical education assumptions, the easy “A” (subthemes: perceptions of physical education teachers and the easy “A”).Conclusion: Allowing students to explain the reasons for decreases in attitudes contributes to improving the teaching and learning process.

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