SportLogia
          Vol. 8, Issue 1, June 2012.
          MUSLIMS SCHOOLGIRLS' IDENTITY AND PARTICIPATION IN SCHOOL-BASED PHYSICAL EDUCATION IN ENGLAND
António Gomes Ferreira1 and José  António Moreira1 
            1Faculty of  Psychology and Educational Sciences, University of Coimbra, Portugal 
              2Department of  Education and Distance Learning, Open University, Portugal 
ORIGINAL SCIENTIFIC PAPER
            doi:  10.5550/sgia.120801.en.029M
            COBISS.BH-ID:  2934552
            UDK: 371.212:796/799(410) 
Summary
This article draws from an ethnographic case study of a  group of Muslim schoolgirls at two schools in England. It examines the issues  surrounding their religious and ethnic identity and whether this conflicts with  participation in school-based Physical Education (PE). Social Identity Theory  underpinned the study, focusing the research and interpretation of empirical  data gathered over a period of twenty months, mainly by in-depth  semi-structured interviews to explicate the PE experiences through employment  of a qualitative methodology. 
            The social categories of ethnicity and religion play a key  part in shaping the identity of Muslim schoolgirls. The girls perceive PE as a  subject, which allows for freedoms not found elsewhere in the curriculum and  they recognise the importance of physical activity. The study confirms the  findings of previous research, which found that issues of kit, fasting during  Ramadan and extra-curricular activities posed problems for Muslim pupils; these  are features, which are especially compounded when teachers are not aware of  the issues. 
            The findings demonstrated the exclusionary nature of  traditional physical education settings. The experiences of pupils were more  reliant upon the quality of individual teachers. Multi-cultural and racism-awareness  courses appear to be indispensable for a better understanding of the pupils,  and making them available to all teachers, regardless of their hierarchical  standing, can be advantageous. 
Key words: identity, Islam, muslim schoolgirls, physical education, religion.
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