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Published byPhilomena Newman Modified over 8 years ago
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PEP Planning and monitoring a personal exercise programme
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The individual and their requirements
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What is the individual trying to achieve? To lose weight To maintain a healthy heart For general health and well-being, to feel good about themselves To regain fitness after an injury To get properly fit to play a specific competitive sport
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Take into account individual’s background/history Male or female? Young or old? Previous exercise experience? Medical clearance?
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Which fitness components? Based on the individual’s requirements and what you are trying to achieve, you then decide which fitness components you are going to train to improve.
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Physiological fitness components Physiological Fitness components Cardio- Vascular Endurance StrengthSpeed Muscular Endurance Flexibility
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Skill related fitness components Skill related Fitness components AgilityBalancetiming Speed of reaction Co- ordination
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Which fitness components?
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Fitness testing and measurement When you have decided which fitness components to address, it is a good idea to do some fitness tests to ascertain the starting level of fitness. You can then re-test every so often to check that fitness levels are improving and to modify your training programme where necessary.
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The multistage fitness test Tests cardiovascular endurance Gives a fairly accurate estimate of VO2 max (how efficiently our heart and lungs can get O2 to our muscles over a period of time). Good test for games players
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The 12 minute run (Cooper test) Also tests cardiovascular endurance Good test for events which require continuous steady activity
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Sprint tests Measure speed 30m acceleration test 60m sprint test 30m ‘flying’ sprint test The running based anaerobic sprint test (RAST)
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Sit and reach test Measures flexibility (hips, hamstrings & lower back)
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Press-up / sit-up test Test muscular endurance
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Illinois speed and agility test Tests speed, agility and balance
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Stork stand test balance
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The training programme When developing a training programme you need to follow certain important principles
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FITT Principles Frequency Intensity Time Type 3 x per week How hard we work 30 minutes Must reflect the needs of the sport
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Training principles Overload Specificity Progression Peaking Reversibility Working beyond present limits – body adapts Training must be specific to the intended activity Easy -> difficult General -> specific Quantity -> quality Coincide with major event Improvements lost at about one third the rate gained
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Which training methods? Circuit training Continuous training Fartlek training Flexibility training Interval training Weight training
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