Reconciling model fidelity and teaching agency: How preservice teachers’ implementation of a hybrid Sport Education-Step Game Approach relates to student learning
Farias, Claudio, Gambles, Ellen-Alyssa, Sierra-Diaz, Jacob, González-Víllora, Sixto and Mesquita, Isabel (2026) Reconciling model fidelity and teaching agency: How preservice teachers’ implementation of a hybrid Sport Education-Step Game Approach relates to student learning. European Physical Education Review. pp. 1-23. ISSN 1741-2749
| Item Type: | Article |
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Abstract
This study examined how different levels of implementation fidelity to critical elements of a hybrid Sport Education–Step Game Approach (SESGA) were associated with students’ game performance during volleyball teaching. Within a master’s-level Physical Education Teacher Education (PETE) program in Northern Portugal, nine preservice teachers (PSTs) and 189 tenth-grade students across nine classes participated. Prior to
school placement, PSTs completed over 300 hours of coursework, including 60 hours of sport-specific pedagogy using the SE-SGA hybrid approach. A quasi-experimental pre-post design was employed. 108 lessons were video-recorded and coded using a 17-item fidelity checklist. Fidelity scores were averaged across 12 lessons per PST. Cluster analysis (Ward’s method) identified three fidelity levels (high, moderate, low). One-way ANOVA and post hoc tests confirmed significant group differences. Students’ game performance was assessed using validated measures: decision-making efficacy (0–3 scale), game performance index (mean across four actions), game involvement score (total actions), rate of play (actions/minute), and efficacy score (successful actions). MANOVA, ANOVA, and multiple mediation analyses were conducted. Results showed that students taught by high-fidelity PSTs achieved the greatest gains across all domains (game involvement, efficacy, rate of play, performance index, and discrete actions: service, reception, setting, attack). Moderate- and low-fidelity groups showed improvements in specific indicators, particularly participation and technical actions. These findings challenge binary fidelity views and highlight how scaffolded, context-sensitive enactment may support learning. These results require further study through in situ analyses of PST-mentor interactions.
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| Depositing User: Ellen Gambles |
Identifiers
| Item ID: 20225 |
| Identification Number: 10.1177/1356336X261458239 |
| ISSN: 1741-2749 |
| URI: https://sure.sunderland.ac.uk/id/eprint/20225 | Official URL: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/1356336X2... |
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| Date Deposited: 15 Jun 2026 13:55 |
| Last Modified: 15 Jun 2026 13:55 |
| Author: |
Ellen-Alyssa Gambles
|
| Author: | Claudio Farias |
| Author: | Jacob Sierra-Diaz |
| Author: | Sixto González-Víllora |
| Author: | Isabel Mesquita |
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Faculty of Education, Society and Creative Industries > School of EducationSubjects
Education > Educational ResearchEducation
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