ABSTRACT

The family is an important site for the transmission of knowledge and cultural values. Amidst claims that young people are failing to follow health advice, dropping out of sport and at risk of an ever-expanding list of lifestyle diseases, families have become the target of government interventions. This book is the first to offer critical sociological perspectives on how families do and do not function as a pedagogical site for health education, sport and physical activity practices.

This book focuses on the importance of families as sites of pedagogical work across a range of cultural and geographical contexts. It explores the relationships between families, education, health, physical activity and sport, and also offers reflections on the methodological and ethical issues arising from this research. Its chapters discuss key questions such as:

  • how active living messages are taken up in families;
  • how parents perceive the role of education, physical activity and sport;
  • how culture, gender, religion and social class shape engagement in sport;
  • how family pedagogies may influence health education, sport and physical activity now and in the future.

This book is essential reading for anyone with an interest in health, physical education, health education, family studies, sport pedagogy or the sociology of sport and exercise.

chapter 1|10 pages

Family matters

An introduction

part 1|58 pages

Family, practice and pedagogy

chapter 2|16 pages

The absent body

Bio-social encounters with the effects of physical activity on the well-being of children and young people

chapter 3|12 pages

Learning about sexuality ‘between' home and school

A new materialist reading

chapter 4|16 pages

Challenging the myth that ‘the parents don't care’

Family teachings about education for ‘educationally disengaged' young people

chapter 5|12 pages

Close to home

What kind of family should we become?

part 2|94 pages

Family's health and physical activity

chapter 7|12 pages

‘The family who eats together stays together'

Governing families, governing health, governing pedagogies

chapter 8|18 pages

Manufacturing (parental) consent

A critical analysis of the HPVV informed consent process in Ontario, Canada

chapter 10|12 pages

‘Pedagogized families' health and culture

Intersectionality of race and social class

part 3|78 pages

Family Physical Education and youth sport

chapter 14|13 pages

Families, youth and extra-curricular activity

Implications for physical education and school sport

chapter 16|11 pages

Family narratives of PE, physical activity and sport

Contingent stories

chapter 17|9 pages

Families, disability and sport