Te Kupenga

Page 152

152

HEALTH IN BODY AND MIND INDIR A NEVILLE DESCRIPTION

MAKER / ARTIST

REFERENCE

‘Kevin diving’, Fairfield College, Hamilton, 1964

Max Christian Oettli (b. 1947)

PA-Group-0002: PADL-001331

Physical Education, phys ed, PE, or whatever it was called at your school, was something we all had to do. Some of us loved it, some of us loathed it, but most of us just did it. Why? Because we had to; it was compulsory. Why? Because it was good for us. In the early 1900s, the commonly held belief that a healthy body ensures a healthy mind drove physical education in New Zealand schools. In the years leading up to the First World War, that approach was all about fitness and military prowess (the ‘healthy body’) and imperialistic morals and ideals (the ‘healthy mind’). Physical education was focused on boys and largely took the form of military training, with marching, drills, fake battles and shooting instruction. From 1913, however, it became compulsory for all students. Healthy children continued to be seen as essential to the strength and survival of the nation, and while the boys kept on marching, the girls undertook less explicitly ‘military’ exercises such as stretching and lifting dumbbells (undertaken in full school uniform, including stockings). This nationalistic approach was a key part of school life until the end of the Second World War, when educationalists began to criticise it as endangering children’s individual moral, physical and emotional development.

MUP004 History 101 200x250 272pp f_a.indd 152

Philip Smithells, the Education Department’s Superintendent of Physical Education, took a similar view. In the 1940s he revamped both the primary and secondary school syllabuses, downplaying ‘allconquering athleticism’ and the connection between the healthy body and the healthy mind. Instead, he stressed the responsibility teachers had to all children as individuals, including those with physical disabilities, those with poor motor skills and ‘average’ performers. He even established remedial clinics to help with this. In addition, Smithells emphasised the aesthetic qualities of movement in his syllabus, mainly through dance and gymnastics, which included trampolining. The current New Zealand Curriculum contains elements of both approaches — physical education for society, and physical education for the individual. Unlike the binary models of the past, they coexist and are considered equally important. As for Kevin, the flying Waikato schoolboy captured in this image by Swiss-born photographer Max Oettli (b. 1947), we don’t know whether he loved or loathed phys ed. But in this moment of trampoline magic, at least, he looks as if he’s having a good time.

15/07/21 5:13 PM


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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

2min
page 267

ABOUT THE CONTRIBUTORS

8min
pages 263-266

INDEX

14min
pages 268-272

DIGITAL DIARIES

2min
pages 248-249

ABOUT THE EDITORS

0
page 262

‘TAKE SAGE OF VIRTUE’

2min
pages 246-247

CLOSING THE GENDER PAY GAP

2min
pages 244-245

‘I SEE YOU’

2min
pages 242-243

WE ARE BENEFICIARIES

2min
pages 240-241

FOR GENERATIONS TO COME

2min
pages 238-239

UNITED IN GRIEF

2min
pages 236-237

FROM LILBURN TO VAPORWAVE

2min
pages 232-235

JAMMERS AND BLOCKERS

2min
pages 228-229

DISASTER AND CARTOONS

1min
pages 226-227

A CHANCE TO DREAM

2min
pages 222-223

COLOSSUS OF SCIENCE

2min
pages 218-219

GAME OF THE PEOPLE

2min
pages 224-225

WRITERS ON RECORD

2min
pages 220-221

COLOUR, MOVEMENT AND MUSIC

2min
pages 216-217

WRITING THE MOVES

2min
pages 212-213

SOMALI PACIFIC STAR

2min
pages 214-215

HE KIRIATA NUI: MĀORI ON SCREEN

2min
pages 210-211

DIVINE ILLUMINATION

2min
pages 204-207

BREAK OUT THE TABS

2min
pages 202-203

NGĀ TAONGA REO MĀORI

2min
pages 198-201

NEW BREATH FOR ANCIENT VOICES

2min
pages 208-209

GOING ANTI-NUCLEAR

2min
pages 196-197

THE LIFE SHE WAS BORN TO LEAD

2min
pages 186-187

VISITING FOOTROT FLATS

2min
pages 188-189

PEOPLE’S POET

3min
pages 184-185

TOITŪ TE WHENUA

2min
pages 180-181

CAMBODIAN JOURNEYS

2min
pages 182-183

‘NOT ONE MORE ACRE’

2min
pages 178-179

THE DAWN RAIDS

2min
pages 176-177

‘EDUCATE TO LIBERATE’

2min
pages 174-175

FROM TOKELAU TO WELLINGTON

2min
pages 170-171

THE GOLDEN AGE OF WOOLCRAFT

2min
pages 166-167

KOROUA, MOKOPUNA

2min
pages 162-163

HUTU AND KAWA

2min
pages 160-161

MEAN MONEY

2min
pages 164-165

WHETU — STYLE ICON

2min
pages 172-173

ANCIENT DOCUMENTS

2min
pages 156-159

GIFT OF FIRE

2min
pages 154-155

HEALTH IN BODY AND MIND

2min
pages 152-153

CUSTOM MEETS COLONISATION

2min
pages 150-151

AOTEAROA FROM THE AIR

2min
pages 136-137

WAR, REFUGE AND LEARNING

2min
pages 148-149

SIGNING THE TREATY

2min
pages 138-139

THE DRAW OF HAINING STREET

2min
pages 132-133

A JAPANESE SONGBOOK

3min
pages 144-147

CURIOS

2min
pages 130-131

COLLECTIVE MIGHT

2min
pages 108-109

SĀMOA MŌ SĀMOA

2min
pages 124-125

SAFE SEX PIONEER

2min
pages 112-113

MANSFIELD’S TYPEWRITER

2min
pages 118-121

CAPTURING THE SPIRIT OF THE AGE

2min
pages 128-129

‘IT’S JUST HELL HERE’

2min
pages 110-111

CHATHAM ISLAND JOCKEY CLUB

2min
pages 114-117

CHAMPION OF WOMEN IN MEDICINE

2min
pages 104-107

PEACE ON THE WATERS

2min
pages 98-99

TAKING MĀORI TO THE WORLD

2min
pages 100-101

DIGGING FOR LIVELIHOODS

2min
pages 102-103

KIRIKI HORI

2min
pages 96-97

A TAXING IMPOSITION

2min
pages 92-95

LAGMHOR SONG BOOK

2min
pages 86-89

LAST OF THE LAUGHING OWLS

2min
pages 90-91

ADVENTURE, LOVE AND KEEPSAKES

2min
pages 82-85

A MORIORI GROUP

2min
pages 80-81

HE WHAKAAHUA RANGATIRA

3min
pages 78-79

FLOWERING ART OF SCIENCE

2min
pages 76-77

ACTIONS AT PARIHAKA

2min
pages 72-73

FARM OF THE SOUTH

2min
pages 74-75

TELEGRAPHIC TWEETS

2min
pages 70-71

WĀHINE MĀORI, WHENUA MĀORI

2min
pages 68-69

KEREOPA TE RAU

2min
pages 66-67

SELLING A FARMING DREAM

2min
pages 60-61

‘I SHALL NOT DIE’

2min
pages 62-65

HE HONONGA TĀNGAENGAE

2min
pages 58-59

SHIPBOARD DIARY

2min
pages 54-55

HE WAHINE TOA

2min
pages 56-57

TWO MĀORI IN VIENNA

2min
pages 50-53

FIRST NEW ZEALAND ATLAS

2min
pages 46-49

EIGHT-HOUR-DAY CHAMPION

2min
pages 44-45

HĀKARI

2min
pages 40-41

TRANSITION IN TAHITI

2min
pages 42-43

BIRD TRADE

2min
pages 36-37

MEETING HONGI HIKA

2min
pages 30-31

ANOTHER VIEW OF WAITANGI

2min
pages 32-33

WHALING IN THE BAY

2min
pages 34-35

LETTER FROM ERUERA

2min
pages 26-29

YOUNG EMISSARIES

2min
pages 24-25

MINIATURE WORLD

2min
pages 20-21

HE MIHI

0
page 6

INTRODUCTION

9min
pages 8-13

PORTRAIT OF AN ALLIANCE

2min
pages 18-19

FOREWORD

1min
page 7

WAKA SAIL

2min
pages 16-17

DRAWN TO TE AO MĀORI

2min
pages 22-23
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