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Featured researches published by Brendan Moy.


Physical Education & Sport Pedagogy | 2016

Why the Constraints-Led Approach is not Teaching Games for Understanding: a clarification

Ian Renshaw; Duarte Araújo; Chris Button; Jia Yi Chow; Keith Davids; Brendan Moy

Background: There is some apparent confusion regarding similarities and differences between two popular physical education (PE) pedagogical frameworks, that is, the Constraints-Led Approach (CLA) and Teaching Games for Understanding (TGfU). Purpose: Our aim in this commentary is to detail important theoretical and pedagogical concepts that distinguish these approaches, as well as to recognise where commonalities exist. Findings: In particular, we note that TGfU had its roots in the 1960s in the absence of a substantial theoretical framework, although several attempts to retrospectively scaffold theories around TGfU have subsequently emerged in the literature. TGfU is a learner-centred approach to PE in which teachers are encouraged to design modified games to develop the learners understanding of tactical concepts. In contrast, the CLA has arisen more recently from the umbrella of Nonlinear Pedagogy (NLP), emerging from the empirically rich theoretical framework of ecological dynamics. The CLA adopts a ‘learner–environment’ scale of analysis in which practitioners are encouraged to identify and modify interacting constraints (of task, environment and learner) to facilitate the coupling of each learners perceptual and action systems during learning. The CLA is a broader framework which has been adapted for the design of (re)learning environments in PE, sport and movement therapy. Other key distinctions between the approaches include: the overall goals; the way in which the learner and the learning process are modelled; the use of questioning as a pedagogical tool; the focus on individual differences vs. generic concepts; and how progressions and skill interjections are planned and implemented. Conclusions: Despite such distinctions, the two approaches are somewhat harmonious and key similarities include: their holistic perspective of the learner; the proposed role of the teacher and the design characteristics of learning tasks in each. Both TGfU and the CLA have a powerful central focus on the nature of learning activities undertaken by each individual learner. This clarification of TGFU and the CLA is intended to act as a catalyst for more empirical work into the complementarity of these juxtaposed pedagogical approaches to learning design.


Physical Education & Sport Pedagogy | 2014

Variations in acculturation and Australian physical education teacher education students' receptiveness to an alternative pedagogical approach to games teaching

Brendan Moy; Ian Renshaw; Keith Davids


Physical Education & Sport Pedagogy | 2016

Overcoming acculturation: physical education recruits' experiences of an alternative pedagogical approach to games teaching

Brendan Moy; Ian Renshaw; Keith Davids; Eric Brymer


Faculty of Health; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation; School of Exercise & Nutrition Sciences | 2009

How current pedagogy methods in games teaching in the UK, Australia and the US have been shaped by historical, socio cultural, environmental and political constraints

Brendan Moy; Ian Renshaw


Ágora para la Educación Física y el Deporte | 2018

A Constraint -Led Approach to Coaching and Teaching Games: : Can going back to the future solve the « they need the basics before they can play a game» argument?

Ian Renshaw; Brendan Moy


Faculty of Health; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation; School of Exercise & Nutrition Sciences | 2016

Teaching against the grain: Learning designs for evolving physical education practice

Brendan Moy


Faculty of Health; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation | 2016

Overcoming acculturation: Physical education recruits' experiences of an alternative pedagogical approach to games teaching

Brendan Moy; Ian Renshaw; Keith Davids; Eric Brymer


Faculty of Health; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation | 2016

The impact of nonlinear pedagogy on physical education teacher education students’ intrinsic motivation

Brendan Moy; Ian Renshaw; Keith Davids


Faculty of Health; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation | 2016

Why the Constraints-Led Approach is not teaching games for understanding: A clarification

Ian Renshaw; Duarte Araújo; Chris Button; Jia Yi Chow; Keith Davids; Brendan Moy


Faculty of Health; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation | 2015

A constraint-led approach for PE teachers

Ian Renshaw; Brendan Moy; Michael Cook

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Ian Renshaw

Queensland University of Technology

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Keith Davids

Sheffield Hallam University

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Jia Yi Chow

Nanyang Technological University

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Eric Brymer

Leeds Beckett University

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