Annemarie Seybold

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Annemarie Seybold (born May 18, 1920 in Nuremberg ; † December 11, 2010 ; born Annemarie Brunnhuber ) was a German sports scientist and sports educator .

Career

Annemarie Seybold-Brunnhuber completed a teaching degree in Erlangen and Munich in the subjects of German, history, physical education, and also studied pedagogy and psychology. As a result, she taught at the university institutes for physical exercise in Munich and Erlangen. As an assistant, she worked on rebuilding the gymnastics philologist training. As a research assistant at the German Sport University Cologne (1951 to 1953) under Carl Diem , she did a teaching position on the subject of "school gymnastics method". Her work "The principles of modern pedagogy in physical education" was awarded the Carl Diem Prize in 1954. In 1957 she accepted a call to the Faculty of Education at the University of Erlangen, where she established and expanded the field of sports education and sports didactics. Seybold gave lectures in several countries. Her main research focus was physical education: The decisive work of her sports science trade is a long-term experiment that was undertaken from 1968 for nine years, in the context of which she accompanied a school class, documented the learning development and teaching topics, in order to then give recommendations for action to convey the joy of movement.

In 1990 she set up a foundation named after her that promotes sports didactics at the University of Erlangen-Nuremberg.

Honors

Individual evidence

  1. a b c Mourning Annemarie Seybold. In: German Association for Sports Science. January 3, 2019, accessed January 13, 2019 .