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S1E05 An Expansive and Democratic View of Physical Education w/ Nate Babcock
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S1E05 An Expansive and Democratic View of Physical Education w/ Nate Babcock

How might concepts such as bodyfulness, corporeality, and phenomenology inform a more democratic approach to physical education?
Transcript

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Theorists and activists argue that education is the bedrock of a democratic society. Having a well-educated citizenry is necessary for people to meet the demands required for democracies to thrive. In the United States, schooling is conceived of as one of the primary vehicles for educating these democratic citizens.

For many who have gone through traditional schooling, physical education seems like an interruption in the school day, for better or for worse, a distraction from the rest of our formal learning. Physical education conjures up a flurry of competitive sports, dodgeball, and fitness tests. Perhaps it brings to mind anxieties around your own body composition and getting in shape, being physically fit or failing to become properly athletic.

In part, this is the consequence of designing physical education with a narrow focus on physical literacy, control, efficiency, and a commitment to a contextless ideal. It could also be the byproduct of larger cultural forces obsessed with profit margins, results, and the bottom line. Contrary to this viewpoint, some educators and scholars are pushing to make physical education a more prominent contributor to democratic living. 

Nate Babcock is an educator in Southern California. With 18 years experience, he is centered on broadening our views of physical education, approaching it as a way of encouraging mobility, physical and social, and democratic practices like cooperation, inclusion, dialogue, and collective exploration. 

How might concepts such as bodyfulness, corporeality, and phenomenology inform a more democratic approach to physical education? What might a more expansive and democratic view of physical education look like? And how do we enlarge conceptions of physical fitness to include how we interact with one another beyond the gym and the classroom, and into our communities?

Show Notes

“Toward Better Whys and Whats of P.E.” by Nate Babcock (2020)

Alfred North Whitehead

Henri Bergson

Gilles Deleuze

Mae-Wan Ho

John Dewey

Maurice Merleau-Ponty

Martin Buber

Carl Rogers

“Somaesthetics: A Disciplinary Proposal” by Richard Shusterman (1999)

“Life and Value: A Whiteheadian Perspective” by Nathaniel Barrett

"Enkinaesthesia: Proto-moral Value in Action-Enquiry and Interaction” by Susan A. J.  Stuart (2017) 

"How to be an Anti-Capitalist Today" by Erik Olin-Wright (2015)

“Who or What is the Self?” by Adam Robbert (2018)

”From Final Knowledge to Infinite Learning, with Chaudhuri, Whitehead, and Deleuze” by Matt Segall (2018)

”Process-Relational Philosophy as a Way of Life” by Adrian Ivakhiv (2018)

I and Thou by Martin Buber (1923)

Unflattening by Nick Sousanis (2015) 

Bodies in Revolt: A Primer in Somatic Thinking by Thomas Hanna (1985)

The Play Ethic: A Manifesto for a Different Way of Living by Pat Kane (2004)

Lucretius II: An Ethics of Motion by Thomas Nail (2020)

Noumenautics: Metaphysics - Meta-Ethics - Psychedelics by Peter Sjöstedt-H (2015)

Ethics in John Cobb's Process Theology by Paul Custodio Bube (1989)

Attunement Through the Body by Shigenori Nagatomo (1992)

The Body, Self Cultivation, and Ki Energy by Yasuo Yuasa (1993)

Creating Capabilities: The Human Development Approach by Martha C. Nussbaum (2013)

Meaning of Life and the Universe by Mae-Wan Ho (2017)

S1E02 Toward a Politics of Uncertainty w/ Daniel Wortel-London (2020)

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Damn the Absolute!
Damn the Absolute!
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