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From Decentralised to Centralised Education: Consequences for Quality Physical Education in Macao SAR
Walter Ho, Klaudia Rafael, Yang Yang Xie, Dilsad Ahmed, Ling Qin, Jiaxi Hu, Zhaojian Cai, Yimeng Wang, Keyue Yan, Rui Gao
International Sports Studies 45 No. 2 (2023)
https://doi.org/10.30819/iss.45-2.08 pp: 103-119 2023-12-21
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Quality Physical Education, Physical Education, Macao SAR, Centralised Education, Decentralised Education, Laissez-faire policy
Cite: APA BibTeX
Ho, W., & Rafael, K., & Xie, Y.Y., & Ahmed, D., & Qin, L., & Hu, J., & Cai, Z., & Wang, Y., & Yan, K., & Gao, R. (2023). From Decentralised to Centralised Education: Consequences for Quality Physical Education in Macao SAR. International Sports Studies, 45 (2), 103-119. doi:10.30819/iss.45-2.08
@article{Ho_2023,
doi = {10.30819/iss.45-2.08},
url = {https://doi.org/10.30819/iss.45-2.08},
year = 2023,
publisher = {Logos Verlag Berlin},
volume = {45},
number = {2},
pages = {103-119},
author = {Walter Ho, Klaudia Rafael, Yang Yang Xie, Dilsad Ahmed, Ling Qin, Jiaxi Hu, Zhaojian Cai, Yimeng Wang, Keyue Yan, Rui Gao},
title = {From Decentralised to Centralised Education: Consequences for Quality Physical Education in Macao SAR},
journal = {International Sports Studies}
}
Abstract
Macao has had a history of practising ‘Laissez-faire’ (non-intervention) in school education
development. However, the city’s return to China in 1999 initiated an era of
change in consideration of the future needs of its society. Therefore, a more responsive
approach was adopted to improve the quality of school education. This study discussed
the strategies adopted for improving the provision of high-quality programmes, particularly
for physical education (PE). A survey questionnaire was conducted for this study,
with the participation of 84 professionals in the field of PE. The data reflected their perceptual
understanding of recent developments in PE in Macao. A high perceptual index
in specific dimensions indicated a strategic pattern of prioritising initiatives in legislative
efforts: curriculum development and unification, academic learning time for PE, extracurricular
activities, school building, and teachers’ training. Emphasis on professionals’
prevailing practices is an easy shortcut to success, but it leads to insufficient attention
toward other important areas, such as students’ cognitive development in PE. This study
provides evidence of strategic difficulties when priorities are partial to specific developmental
issues. This situation becomes a concern as complacency may overlook other essential
areas for progress in PE.