Construction of the Evaluation Index System for the Sustainable Development of Primary School Campus Football in Shaanxi Province, China
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.60027/ijsasr.2023.3300Keywords:
School Sports; , Primary School Football; , Sustainable Development of Campus Football;, Schools with Special Characteristics of Campus FootballAbstract
Background and Aim: This study expounds the theoretical framework for constructing the evaluation index system for the sustainable development of elementary school football in Shaanxi Province, including the final evaluation index system and evaluation methods. The main objective of this research was to develop the evaluation index system for football in elementary schools in China’s Shaanxi province.
Materials and Methods: The populations of this research include educational experts, physical education experts, teachers or university teachers, experts in the direction of football, campus football managers, and football coaches. Consult 5 experts through questionnaires and then using the Delphi method, the expert questionnaires were distributed to 19 experts, and two rounds of questionnaires were distributed and collected to screen out the core indicators and then determine the index weight of the sustainable development evaluation system of primary school football in Shaanxi Province, finally use the fuzzy comprehensive evaluation method to evaluate the sustainable development ability of Xi'an primary school football.
Result: (1) Construct the sustainable development evaluation index system for primary school football in Shaanxi Province, including 4 first-level indicators, 13 second-level indicators, and 48 third-level indicators. (2) The first-level indicator, "organizational leadership and policy" is higher than the other three indicators, accounting for 31%. The second-level indicators, the weight of the four indicators of "implementation of national policies", "improvement of rules and regulations", "physical education hours", and "campus football culture" all exceed 10%, and there should be more support and supervision in the development process. Among the third-level indicators, the weight of the two indicators of "after-school training and competition rules and regulations" and "the number of football-themed campus cultural activities" exceeds 5%. The weight of the six indicators of "Rules and Regulations", "Number of Weeks", "Length of a Single Class", and "Extracurricular Activities" exceeds 3.5%.
Conclusion: The research findings were: (1) There are 65 indicators of first-level, second-level, and third-level sustainable development of primary school campus football in Shaanxi Province, China. (2) Determine the weight ratio of indicators at all levels. (3) Through empirical research, the level of sustainable development ability of campus football in primary schools in Xi'an is obtained.
References
Barbara, M. (2010). Use of Education Data at the Local Level from Accountability to Instructional Improvement. U.S. Department of Education Office of Planning, Evaluation, and Policy Development. Faculty Publications, Department of Child, Youth, and Family Studies.196. http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/famconfacpub/196
Brundtland, G.H. (1987). Our Common Future: Report of the World Commission on Environment and Development. Geneva, UN-Dokument. A/42/427. http://www.un-documents.net/ocf-ov.htm
Chen, H. (2016). My Country's Campus Football Resource Dilemma and Public-Private Cooperation—Based on the Logical Perspective of Multiple Systems. Journal of Shenyang Institute of Physical Education.
Guo B.F. (2015). Feasibility analysis of football activities in rural primary and secondary schools in Shanxi Province. Doctoral dissertation: Beijing Sport University.
Li, T. (2011). Factors and countermeasures affecting the sustainable development of school sports. Science and Technology Information, (2), 275.
Li, W., Han, B., et al. (2019). Examination and Future Development of Provincial Campus Football Promotion—Based on Field Research in H Province. Journal of Wuhan Institute of Physical Education, 53(4), 6-10.
Meng, F., & Liao, X. (2009). Research on the Current Situation and Sustainable Development of School Sports Development in Reclamation Areas of Heilongjiang Province. Journal of Harbin Institute of Physical Education, 27(5), 59-62.
Shang, J. (2013). Analysis of Influencing Factors and Measures for the Sustainable Development of School Sports. Sports, (10), 77-78.
Shi, L., & et al. (2019). The Evolution of Sustainable Development Theory: Types, Goals, and Research Prospects. Journal of Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute. 11(24), 1-16.
The Ministry of Education. (2020). Global Standards and Indicators for Health Promoting Schools. United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization. (3),7-16.
The World Commission on Environment and Development. (1987). Our common future. Brundtland Report.1-84.
Yang, B. (2015). Taking sports skills teaching as the starting point to promote the sustainable development of school sports. Academy, (26), 118-122.
You, J., Wang, Q., Wu, Z., & Zhao, Q. (2022). Research on the configuration of youth campus football facilities—Take 69 primary schools with football characteristics in the six districts of Xi'an City as an example. Youth Sports, (4), 48-50.
Zeng, G., & Fan, C. (2021). Research on the cultural connotation of youth campus football under the background of the top-level design. Youth Sports, (12), 42-45.
Zhang, Q. (2021). Concept Analysis and Realization Ways of Kindergarten Teachers Sustainable Development. Journal of Chengdu Normal University, 37(11), 60-68.
Zhou, B. (2018). Research on the Development Countermeasures of Schools with Characteristics of Campus Football in Shanghai. Science and Education Journal (Mid-day Journal), (6), 149-151.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2023 XiaoYu Fan , Panya Sungkawadee
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
Copyright on any article in the International Journal of Sociologies and Anthropologies Science Reviews is retained by the author(s) under the under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. Permission to use text, content, images, etc. of publication. Any user to read, download, copy, distribute, print, search, or link to the full texts of articles, crawl them for indexing, pass them as data to software, or use them for any other lawful purpose. But do not use it for commercial use or with the intent to benefit any business.