Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Physical education
- Analysis of performance
- Officials and sport leaders
- Sport leaders- highly
influential and have the
power to motivate the
people around them
- can also help with
tactics and strategies
in competitions
- Referees and
umpires
- Making sure the rules of the
game is being followed
- these rules make the sport
- Coaches need to know all of these
rules, this is so they can improved
performance
- to help keep players safe
- Sports leaders
- All sports have leaders who can
influence those surrounding them and
wanting to improve performances
- These sport leaders need the
qualities of:
- Enthusiasm
- Outstanding ability in the sport they are in
- Ability to motivate people
surrounding them
- Ability to read the game or
a sporting situation
- Captains and Coaches are an example
- Health and fitness
- Benefits of sport
- Regular exercise
helps improve our
health and fitness
- Health- state of complete
mental, physical and social
well-being
- Mental benefits
- confidence improves
- the relief of stress and tension
- Physical benefits
- losing weight
- improved posture and body shape
- Social benefits
- making friends
- meeting new people
- Health-related fitness factors
- Cardiovascular fitness
- ability to exercise the whole
body for long periods of time
- Muscular strength
- the amount of force a muscle
can expect against resistance
- Muscular endurance
- the ability to use voluntary
muscles many times without
being tired
- Flexibility
- range of movement at a joint
- Body composition
- percentage of body weight,
which is fat, muscle or bone
- Speed
- different rates in which an
individual is able to perform a
movement
- Skill-related fitness factors
- Agility
- ability to change the position of
the body quickly and with control
- Balance
- ability to retain the centre
of mass above the base of
support
- Co-ordination
- ability to use two or
more body parts
together
- Power
- ability to use strength at speed
- Reaction time
- time between the presentation of a
stimulus and the onset of a
movement
- Speed
- different rate at which an
individual is able to perform a
movement
- Methods of training
- Training can be either aerobic or
anaerobic exercise
- Aerobic exercise
- steady exercise, that is not too
fast ( the heart is able to supply
enough oxygen to the muscles )
- improves
cardiovascular
- Anaerobic exercise
- exercise is performed in
short,fast burst (Where the heart
cannot supply enough oxygen to
the muslces)
- improving the ability of the muscles to
work without enough oxygen ( when
lactic acid is produced)
- Types of training
- Circuit training
- performing a series of
exercises in a special order
- each of these activities take
place at a 'station'
- can improve: speed, agility, co-ordination,
balance and musclar endurance
- Continuous training
- working for a sustained
period of time, but
without rest
- improves cardiovascular fitness
- Cross training
- using another sporting
activity, to improve
fitness
- training in a different type of enviroment
- Fartlek training
- changing your speed
and the terrain which
you run over
- interval training
- Alternating between periods of hard exercise and rest
- improves speed and
muscular endurance
- Weight training
- using weights to provide
resistance to the muscles
- Improves muscular strength
and muscular endurance
- Effects of training and exercise
- After exercise, the body willl always experience
immediate and gradual after effects
- Effects on our bones, joints and muscles
- Immediate effects
- muscles contraction
- increased blood flow
to our muscles
- rise in muscles
temperature
- Effects of regular training
- increase in bone
width and desnity
- muscles, tendons
and ligaments get
stronger as time
passes
- joints become more stable
- increased flexibility at the joints
- muscles get bigger
(known as
hypertrophy)
- your muscle endurance improves
- Effects on the cardiovascular system
- Immediate effects of training
- increasing the heart
rate
- blood temperature rises
- blood vessels near the skin, open
to allow heat to be lost effectively
- Effects of regular training
- heart muscles increases in size and depth
- lower heart resting rate
- quicker recovert rate
- reduces risk of heart disease
- Principles and methods of training
- You need planning in order to get the best
out of your training
- best programmes are built on principles of
specificity, overload, progression and
reversibility
- Needs for things:
- Frequency
- decides how often to train
- Intensity
- decides how hard to train
- Time
- decides how long to
train for
- Type
- decides which methods of
training to use
- A well good training programme will meet
individual needs, that are based on: age, gender,
fitness level and the sport you are training for
- Key principles when planning a
programme
- Specificity
- training must be matches to the needs of the
sporting activity, improving fitness in the body
parts used in that sport
- Overload
- fitness can only be improved by
training more ( more than you usually
do )
- Progression
- Starting slowly
- Gradually increasing the
amount of exercise and
keep overloading
- Reversibility
- any adaptation that will take place as a
result of training, will then be reversed
once you've stopped training