Ohio Association for Health, Physical Education, Recreation, and Dance records
Scope and Content
The Ohio Association for Health, Physical Education, Recreation, and Dance (OAHPERD) records span from 1895-2002 and document the activities of this professional organization for the advancement of physical education. The records include constitutions and by-laws, correspondence, board of directors and representative assembly meeting minutes, annual reports, physical standards evaluation criteria, committee minutes and materials, workshop materials, president's council materials and reports, reports, conventional materials, treasurer's files and financial materials, member directories, awards, publications, photographs, and an audio recording.
Dates
- Creation: 1895-2002
- Creation: Majority of material found within ( 1920s-2000s)
Language of Materials
The records are in English.
Conditions Governing Access
The collection is open under the rules and regulations of the Ohio University Libraries.
Conditions Governing Use
Ohio University retains all property rights to the collection.
Ohio University retains all copyrights unless retained by the donor, other correspondents, or other artists.
History of Ohio Association for Health, Physical Education, Recreation, and Dance
The Ohio Association for Health, Physical Education, Recreation, and Dance (OAHPERD) was formed on March 30, 1895. First dubbed the Ohio Physical Education Association (OPEA), the organization was the first state-wide physical education association created in the country. The birth of the OPEA was a result of H.R. 457, passed on 13 April 1892, wherein the bill made physical culture in schools compulsory. Ohio was also the first state to pass a physical education law. However, three years after its creation, the OPEA disbanded due to the difficulty for a state-wide association to meet regularly.
Though the association was disbanded, there was still continual interest in physical education standards in schools. Owing mostly to the deplorable physical condition of raw recruits upon entering the World War I United States Army, many citizens sought to reform the OPEA. Groups such as the National Physical Education Service, Ohio Collegiate Physical Education Society, and the American Legion all played a role in the passing of the Sullivan-McCreary Bill in 1923. The bill called for mandatory physical education in all schools across the state.
Following the Sullivan-McCreary Bill, the State of Ohio hired Dr. Clifford Brownell as the Supervisor of Physical Education. In 1929, with the efforts of Dr. Brownell, the OPEA was reinstated as the School Health and Physical Education Association of Ohio (SHPHAO). World War II initiated an interest in funding the SHPHAO as the federal government feared a repeat of what occurred during WWI. Physical educators throughout the state organized fitness programs, and worked closely with civilian defense programs. in 1942, the U.S. Department of Education assumed control of the fitness programs.
On 12 February 1944, The SHPHAO was renamed Ohio Association for Health, Physical Education, and Recreation (OAHPER). Due to funding by the Kellogg Foundation, physical education made great leaps in the 1940s: establishing health instructions in Ohio schools, and creating workshops at Ohio State University to train teachers.
The Student Organization Committee, the OAHPER's first student group within the association, was founded in February 1959. Formed to study and develop more active participation of students in OAHPER, the Student Organization Committee also attempted to form student representation in the Representative Assembly, which was passed in 1960. Aside from allowing students their own division within the OAHPER, girls' and women's sports was also granted full and permanent status as a division in the association.
The 1960s marked a period where OAHPER took on a larger role within the state. In January 1960, OAHPER president Chalmer Hixson sent out a letter of invitation to all teach-training institutions throughout Ohio. Hixson proposed all leaders meet at the Ohio State University on February 19, 1960 to discuss normalizing physical education teaching standards. Throughout the next several years, that committee met to discuss all angles of physical education in Ohio. On February 20, 1966, the committee completed its the "Green Meadows Report," and sent it to the Ohio State Department of Education for consideration of revised standards. Other states adopted the recommendations in this report for their own physical education standards. From the report came two handbooks that were used by educators decades: Evaluative Criteria for Health Education
, and Evaluative Criteria for Physical Education
.
The Dance Division of the OAHPER had been part of the association since the early 1960s. In December 1979, the OAHPER elevated dance division to a higher status within the association. This effected another name change: Ohio Association for Health, Physical Education, Recreation, and Dance.
As of 2009, the organization's main role is physical education is to suggest curriculum and exercises for schools across the state.
Extent
13 cubic feet (13 record center cartons)
Abstract
Committee files, constitutions, operating codes, association reports, presidential reports, meeting minutes, convention materials, treasurer's files, awards, correspondence, books, printed materials, photographs, microfilm, recordings.
Statement of Arrangement
This collection remains in its original arrangement.
Other Finding Aid
A paper copy of the folder list is available.
Acquisition Information
The Ohio University Archives received the collection in 2006.
Existence and Location of Copies
Ohio University will entertain requests to photocopy reasonable amounts of material from the collection for the convenience of individual researchers.
Bibliography
- Grice, J.W. "History of Ohio Association for Health, Physical Education, and Recreation". Ph.D. dissertation, Ohio State University, 1971.
- OAHPERD, "Overview". www.oahperd.org. Accessed: 20 May 2009.
Description Note
Original, legacy collection inventories may contain inaccuracies or be incomplete. Collection descriptions may change or be updated as they are verified. Please contact Mahn Center staff if you note any errors or discrepancies.
Subject
- Title
- Finding aid for the Ohio Association for Health, Physical Education, Recreation, and Dance records
- Author
- Finding aid prepared by Seth Givens in 2009-2010
- Date
- 2020
- Language of description
- English
- Script of description
- Latin
- Language of description note
- Finding aid written in English
- Sponsor
- The finding aid was converted into EAD with funding support from the National Historical Publications and Records Commission.
Revision Statements
- 5 January 2024: Subjects and other notes added from ALICE MARC records and Mahn Center Microsoft Office finding aids by Ohio University Libraries Metadata Services Department Python scripts.
Repository Details
Part of the Mahn Center for Archives and Special Collections Repository