KIRK, Benjamin (2024). Primary Physical Education Specialist Teachers’ Perceptions of Role and Agency. Doctoral, Sheffield Hallam University. [Thesis]
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Kirk_2025_EdD_PrimaryPhysicalEducation.pdf - Accepted Version
Restricted to Repository staff only until 17 October 2026.
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial No Derivatives.
Kirk_2025_EdD_PrimaryPhysicalEducation.pdf - Accepted Version
Restricted to Repository staff only until 17 October 2026.
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial No Derivatives.
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Abstract
The first 10 years of a child’s life are considered the most critical in developing their future
interests and behaviours, including a commitment to being physically active. Therefore,
positive experiences within primary school, where children often experience structured
physical activity (PA) for the first time (and only time for some) are considered essential. As
the subject uniquely tasked with corporeal development, physical education (PE) is
increasingly being recognised for the role it can play in setting a foundation for lifelong
engagement in PA. However, with a diversifying workforce and variable levels of quality
noted, there is considerable international debate about who is best placed to deliver high-quality PE in primary schools.
Since 2015 there has been the option in England to train as a primary school teacher with PE
specialism, and this group of teachers now makes up a small but significant number of the
workforce. Survey research during their pre-service training has identified that these teachers
accumulate more hours of PE-specific tuition, observe and teach more PE lessons, and identify
as more confident and willing PE teachers than their non-specialist colleagues. However,
there is yet to be any research exploring the specialists’ perceptions and experiences once
they are in-service. Research has previously questioned the role/s and purpose of PE
specialists in the primary sector and how their expertise may be utilised in a landscape that is
becoming increasingly complex, with a maze of policy and initiatives, stakeholders from
within and beyond education, and increasing accountability.
Therefore, this study adopted a constructivist grounded theory approach to investigate how
20 primary PE specialist teachers perceived their PE role/s. It then utilised Priestly et al.’s
(2013) ecological conceptualisation of teacher agency as a theoretical framework to critically
examine the factors considered to mediate the specialists’ sense that they were achieving
agency in these roles. All participants qualified to teach via a one-year, full-time primary
education (5-11) PE specialist post-graduate certificate in education. The sample comprised
12 males and eight females, roughly reflecting the gender cohort ratio on the pathway. Data
were collected via a single interview with each teacher, either face-to-face or via video
conference call and analysed in three stages. Firstly, via inductive analysis to identify the specialists’ perceived roles, then the data were sorted into categories from Priestly et al.’s
(2013) ecological conceptualisation of teacher agency model, and finally, a process of open
coding provided a more nuanced account of the specialists’ sense of agency.
The findings reveal that the PE specialist teachers perceived they had four key roles: to teach
high-quality PE, to provide PE guidance and support to colleagues, to be an advocate for PE,
sport and PA, and to be an effective PE subject leader (SL). Reflecting on their extensive
sporting histories and their education and training, the specialists all considered that they had
the agentic capacity to be successful in their perceived roles. However, the school ecology,
i.e. the structural, cultural and material contexts within which they were working, significantly
shaped the specialists’ sense that they were achieving agency and consequently, their actions
and aspirations. The factors influencing primary PE specialist teachers’ perceptions of agency
are presented in a novel conceptual framework, which may function as a model for future
empirical studies. The study concludes with a discussion around the potential for primary PE
specialist teachers to meaningfully enhance PE provision, but warns of the significance of the
environmental context and how it may serve to incapacitate individuals with otherwise high
agentic capacity.
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