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PE at school

(123 Posts)
Beswitched Sun 30-Jan-22 09:41:23

Like a lot of people I avoided PE at school as much as possible. The tiny skirts, communal changing room and generally bad way it was taught were a complete turn off.

I don't know how much it's changed, but surely pupils should be streamed, as they are in other subjects, rather than the totally non sporty being expected to keep up with the super athletic. That way people like me might have left school with the idea that sport and exercise can be fun and enjoyable and not just something I'm embarrassingly useless at.

Josieann Sun 30-Jan-22 15:37:20

Grandma70s

My husband was Australian and, fine weather or not, I can assure you he loathed school games every bit as much as I did!

It must be a universal dislike then!

Skydancer Sun 30-Jan-22 15:26:38

Dreadful wasn't it. So embarrassing for those of us no good at it. Also hockey - standing out on a cold field with stupid shorts on and wondering which way our team was playing as I had no interest whatsoever what any of the rules were. Nobody wanted me or my friends on their team. We didn't care as eventually we just stopped going and nobody seemed to miss us.

MerylStreep Sun 30-Jan-22 15:25:42

Calistemon
Same here with my school friend who went to the Rome Olympics.

annodomini Sun 30-Jan-22 15:23:23

Navy gym knickers and rolled up sleeves. I can't remember doing anything very interesting when we had PE indoors in the gym. We sometimes went out and played hockey which I enjoyed - wasn't bad, but there were at least 11 girls better, so I was stuck in the second XI. Tennis wasn't on the curriculum, but other schools had tennis teams, so a few girls who played regularly were sent off to play our rivals. When I was roped in as a reserve, we did very badly!

ayse Sun 30-Jan-22 15:14:48

Witzend

Must say I wasn’t keen in the teen years. I dare say it wasn’t an accurate perception, but all the very sporty girls seemed to be revoltingly hearty, red faced types, with floppy heaving bosoms and smelling badly of BO. And I hated the communal showers with a teacher watching our every move - no wonder we had them down as closet lesbians, with sadistic tendencies.

And I’d gladly have done without hockey on freezing cold days when we had to wear just silly little skirts and our legs would go purply-blue with cold.
Didn’t object so much to summer PE, rounders and swimming were OK. Tennis not so much because I was never much cop at it.

Many happy memories of freezing legs and avoiding communal showers wherever possible.

I was relatively good at PE and thoroughly enjoyed playing hockey and netball for the school. Rounders in the summer was just fun.

I felt really sorry for the girls who were not good at these sports. It would have been far preferable to have a choice that didn’t depend on how good you were.

I love the idea of dance, yoga, etc. but many schools in the public sector can’t afford the staff. I do know that some schools have substituted traditional ‘games’ for other forms of exercise. It really isn’t important to just play competitive games and any exercise is more important. There should be enough resources to provide both in a more equal country.

Callistemon21 Sun 30-Jan-22 15:09:26

One of DS's friends went off to Millfield!
My DS went to the local comprehensive where he swam, played rugby, tennis, football and did the hated cross-country (but it was through lovely countryside but unappreciated at the time ?‍♂️)

Grandma70s Sun 30-Jan-22 15:09:18

My husband was Australian and, fine weather or not, I can assure you he loathed school games every bit as much as I did!

Aveline Sun 30-Jan-22 15:09:06

Street dance just requires a boombox and a cheerful approach!

Josieann Sun 30-Jan-22 15:03:22

Fascinating discussion and lots of references to cold showers, and frosty playing fields in winter etc. Does the dislike of PE in this country have a lot to do with the weather? Do any grans have GC downunder say where PE is done differently?

Caleo makes a good point that the more attractive activities involve far more costs, and also I would add far more trained staff. I visited Millfield School on a couple of occasions and crikey, indoor riding arena, Olympic sized swimming pool, tennis courts, astro turfs, even 2 massive competitive trampolines etc. That's what £30,000 a year per child buys .

Blondiescot Sun 30-Jan-22 14:50:37

I detested it, loathed it with a vengeance! I was always the last to be picked too. I was never very body confident and communal changing rooms were complete anathema to me. I used to find any excuse I could to get out of doing PE. It didn't help that our PE teachers used to pick the coldest day of the year to send us outside to do things like hockey or cross-country. I've still got a scar on my knee from where I fell on a freezing baize hockey pitch. The only remotely sporty thing I enjoyed was horse riding - needless to say that played no part in school life whatsoever.

Cabbie21 Sun 30-Jan-22 14:43:39

At first I tried my best with PE and games until I realised I was no good and never picked for a team. It put me off for life. I quite liked dance, but although I am very musical, I cannot co-ordinate movement with music. I simply do not know how to any sort of physical activity in a competitive way.

varian Sun 30-Jan-22 14:03:28

We had no PE kit, we just changed into black sandshoes, took off our skirts and ties and did PE in school blouse and navy knickers. There were no showers so we must have been pretty smelly afterwards.

One of our PE teachers was definitely a sadist who would pick on girls who weren't good at PE and torment them relentlessly. She must have put so many girls off sport and exercise for life.

The only type of exercise I really enjoyed was swimming but our school didn't do swimming so I would go to the local swimming baths after school.

I never heard of anyone (apart from boxers) going to a gym outside of school. When did that start?

Grandma70s Sun 30-Jan-22 12:51:38

I loathed all school games and gymnastics with a passion, and managed to avoid most of it. I (and others) became adept at lying and deceit. So much for character training!

I did and loved ballet, so I got plenty of exercise. I was delighted when I heard Margot Fonteyn talking about her schooldays and saying how she had hated and loathed games.

Caleo Sun 30-Jan-22 12:47:58

The problem with physical education is the fun activities such as exploring, riding, swimming, and rowing cost more money than gymnastics or team games with balls.

'Street dance' sounds a good idea.

Chocolatelovinggran Sun 30-Jan-22 12:44:40

Yep, hated PE at school. Fortunately, my incompetence, combined with inertia, gave me my favourite role on Sports Day - raking the sand under the high jump...

EllanVannin Sun 30-Jan-22 12:36:14

Yet, on sports day I won at throwing the javelin---16feet if I remember rightly.

EllanVannin Sun 30-Jan-22 12:34:11

Scottish dancing and ballet were my " things".

EllanVannin Sun 30-Jan-22 12:32:26

I hated it ! Didn't think it was at all ladylike doing the same things that the boys did. I really don't know what put that in my mind all those years ago, all of at least 70yrs gone !

Aveline Sun 30-Jan-22 12:27:41

I'm back to huge navy knickers again. Lovely and comfy. Never understood the pocket in school ones though.

Aveline Sun 30-Jan-22 12:26:04

I was always one of the last girls picked for a team. Just me, the specky one, and the fat girl left till last. Didn't bother me. There was usually an unholy scrum to get me in a team for any quizzes though.

Grandmabatty Sun 30-Jan-22 11:43:58

I was small and fast when much younger and used to like running. I also was part of the Scottish Country Dancing team at school and loved that. I hated everything else. Hockey was brutal. Cross country was boring. The school I taught at offered such a wonderful range of activities for pupils. They had elite footballers and rugby players, both boys and girls. A beautiful swimming pool which staff could access before school started. And were also the recognised school for elite Basketball players too. But it was more about health and wellbeing and recognising that any activity is better than none. I'm not sure it would have suited the teenage me, mind you.

silverlining48 Sun 30-Jan-22 11:23:22

Loathed PE hated the huge navy knickers and the showers.
Avoided it any way I could.
Always last to be chosen for team games, probably with good reason, but it was humiliating.
I liked rounders; that was about it.
I am Glad my GC like games and have always encouraged them and regret not giving it more of a go myself.

fiorentina51 Sun 30-Jan-22 11:17:44

Reminds me of Alan Ahlberg's poem,

PICKINGTEAMS
When we pick teams in the playground,
Whatever the game might be,
There’s always somebody left till last
And usually it’s me.
I stand there looking hopeful
And tapping myself on the chest,
But the captains pick the others first,
Starting, of course, with the best.

Maybe if teams were sometimes picked
Starting with the worst,
Once in his life a boy/ girl like me
Could end up being first!

Witzend Sun 30-Jan-22 11:11:28

Callistemon21

. I dare say it wasn’t an accurate perception, but all the very sporty girls seemed to be revoltingly hearty, red faced types, with floppy heaving bosoms and smelling badly of BO
?

My DD were very sporty, very slim, not red-faced and I really hope they didn't smell shock

So were mine, Callistemon.
In my day I dare say I was viewing everything PE related through very jaundiced glasses.
(Some of them certainly did have floppy heaving bosoms and stink of BO, though.)

Beswitched Sun 30-Jan-22 10:49:43

I was an extremely slim teenager but useless at sport. There were a few heavy girls who were surprisingly athletic and quick on the sports field. I don't think there's a particular type really.