What is it about?
Recent work has begun to explore the rationale for elite athlete programmes (EAPs) and their educational priorities, but little research has explored how the elite athlete body is being constructed within this curriculum space. In this paper, I consider two interrelated problems. The first concerns the conflicting discourses of winning in high-performance sport versus getting everyone healthy and active in health and PE. The second involves an explanation of how the elite athlete body is being constructed in these programmes.
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Why is it important?
I argue the juxtaposition of the elite athlete body as disciplined, attractive and healthy to other bodies as lazy, unattractive and unhealthy renders the other bodies as pathological or resistant to disciplinary institutions of the school. In particular, I focus on the ways in which young people's bodies are conceptualised within EAPs in relation to recreation, health, PE and other curriculum spaces. Throughout this paper, I provide examples to illustrate how EAPs may perpetuate normative ways of thinking that legitimatise elitism in schools.
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This page is a summary of: Reconceptualising elite athlete programmes: ‘undoing’ the politics of labelling in health and physical education, Sport Education and Society, January 2013, Taylor & Francis,
DOI: 10.1080/13573322.2012.753048.
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