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8026043
Chapter 3.1 globalisation of sport
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A level Physical Education (PE) (KMP) Mapa Mental sobre Chapter 3.1 globalisation of sport, criado por Lucinda Adams em 09-03-2017.
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physical education (pe)
kmp
a level
Mapa Mental por
Lucinda Adams
, atualizado more than 1 year ago
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Criado por
Lucinda Adams
quase 8 anos atrás
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Resumo de Recurso
Chapter 3.1 globalisation of sport
Popular recreation
life in pre industrial Britain
communication were limited
illiterate
lower class were treated violently
limited free time
class divisions
lived in rural areas
characteristics of popular recreation
limited transport so activities were local
sport restricted to annual events
used natural land for games
rules were basic and applied to particular community
long work hours
aggressive and male dominated
upper class bet on the lower class
harsh society, caused lots of injury
Game examples
real tennis
mob football
athletics
Industrial and post-industrial development of sport
development of rational recreation
when Britain became industrialised sport turned from popular recreation to rational recrreation
games were more logical
more structure to the games
social and cultural influences on the development of rational recreation
industrial revolution (first half of 19th century)
migration of lower classes into urban areas
lack of leisure time
lack of income
poor health
loss of rights
lack of public provisions
industrial revolution (second half of 19th century)
health and hygiene improved
gradual increase in wages
more time for sport
new middle class
value of athleticism
industrial patronage
improved transport and communication
cheaper to travel
Urbanisation
Mob games were banned
Lack of space
Large working populations
Loss of traditional sports
Change in working conditions
Transport revolution
Movement of teams and spectators
Improved access to new parts of the country
Cheaper train travel
Improved access to coutnryside
Communcations
Society became more literate
printed media increased knowledge of sport
led to role mdoels
Match reports
Church
encouraged social control
diverts people away from dangerous past time
provide facilities e.g. halls
sports promote Christian values
YMCA promotes healthy body/mind
Middle Class
Codification
Competitions, leagues
Public Provision
Increased Leisure time
Professionalism
Development of sport in Britain and its spread through the British Empire
Public School boys and ex university students
Teachers: developed teams and taught sporting values
Factory owners: set up teams and gave workers time off for sports
Clergy: developed church teams, took sport abroad
Officers in British Army: spread sport throughout empire
Diplomats: travelled the world and took sports with them
Public Provision
Public Baths
Plunge baths
used to swim in
sport was used as social control
National governing bodies
Mid to late 19th century they were created
Due to:
Sport becoming more popular
more teams and clubs being created
Leagues and competitions required
Codification was required
to deal with commercialisation of sport
Characteristics of rational recreation
Respectful: non violent
regionally: sports spread everywhere
Codification: rules introduced
Referees/officials
Purpose built facilities: pitches, tracks & grounds
Skills based: positional roles, training more emphasis
Amateurism and professionalism
Amateurism late 19th century
appreciate the value of health and fitness
playing for the love no financial gain
usually upper classes (gentleman amateur)
training frowned upon
Positives of amateurism
they held a higher status then professionals
they adhered to a code of ethics (high moral level)
Code of amateurism playing with rules
participation more important than winning
belonging to social elite, having wealth and free time for sport
they were the elite performers
professional late 19th century
Working class
poor
little free time to play
committed to training, perform to best ability
Low moral, winning important
Positives of professionalism
they could receive payment for playing
performance increased due to training
determination to succeed because of payment
modern day amateurs
lower status
performance at top level open to everyone
some have finance to pay for training expenses
modern day professionalism
social class no longer a barrier
they are at the top
More time to train e.g full time
high rewards
celeb status
role models
money invested
spectators go and watch their matches
emergence of elite female footballers in modern day
Reasons for increase in opportunities
equal opportunities
increased media of women football
More female role models in football
increased approval from FA
more clubs forming
more funding into game=more participation
more free time
commercialism, media & sponsorship
golden triangle
They are all reliant upon each other
all dependant,without each side sport wouldn't be what it is today
effects of commercialism on the performer
receive high income for particpation and commercial activities e.g sponsorships
paid for successful results (winning is important)
under pressure to perform when injured
must specialise in sport to compete
become entertainers
controlled by sponsor
effects of commercialism on sport
rules and scoring changed to speed up the action e.g badminton score on every point
breaks in play so sponsors can advertise their products and services
competition formats changed e.g 20/20 cricket
sports by women have less coverage
increased tech has meant viewing is easier
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