Summer exam booklet 2015 16

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GCSE P.E. END OF YEAR 10 SUMMER REVISION PACK 2016 THE FOLLOWING REVISION PACK CONTAINS ALL AREAS THAT WILL BE ASSESSED IN YOUR SUMMER EXAM


1.

REASONS FOR PARTICIPATION

PHYSICAL •

MENTAL

Increase fitness e.g. muscular endurance

SOCIAL

Relieve stress

Make friends

Increase self esteem

Developing cooperation/

communication

If overweight reduce obesity

2.

INFUENCES ON YOUR HEALTHY, ACTIVE LIFESTYLE

People

Health and Well being

Cultural

Socio Economic

Resources

Image

Role Models

Illness

Age

Cost (Expense)

Equipment

Fashion

Family

Injury

Gender

Class

Access to Facilities

Media

Race

Status

Location

Friends

Disability

Time


3.

OPPORTUNITIES TO BECOME INVOLVED IN SPORT

Roles in Sport:

Participant – player

Leadership – Coaches and managers

Official – referee/umpire

Volunteer

Initiatives – aim to get people to start and remain involved in sport by: 

START

STAY

SUCCEED

Who runs initiatives? 

Organisations such as the Youth Sports Trust and Sport England

National Governing Bodies e.g. the F.A.

Participation Pyramid


4.

Health, Exercise, Fitness and Performance

Key definitions: 

Health - Not merely the absence of disease and infirmity. It is a positive state of complete mental, physical and social wellbeing.

Exercise - A form of physical activity which maintains or improves health and/or physical fitness

Fitness - The ability to meet the demands of the environment

Performance - How well a task is completed.

5. HEALTH RELATED COMPONENTS OF FITNESS Component of Fitness Test

Sporting Example Definition

Cardiovascular Fitness Cooper Run

Marathon

The ability to exercise the entire body for long periods of time


Muscular Endurance

Harvard Step test

Canoeing

The ability to use voluntary muscles many times without getting tired

Muscular Strength

grip dynamometer

Weightlifter

The amount of force a muscle can exert against a resistance.

Body Composition

Caliper test

Sumo wrestler/Jockey

The percentage of body weight which is fat, muscle and bone

Flexibility

Sit and Reach test

Gymnast (splits)

The range of motion possible at a joint

6. SKILL RELATED FITNESS COMPONENTS Component of Fitness

Test

Sporting Example

Definition

Balance

Stork Stand

Gymnastics – The ability to retain the centre of mass balance beam (gravity) of the body above the base of support with reference to static – stationary – or dynamic – changing – conditions of movement, shape & orientation

Speed

30m sprint

100M sprint

Coordination

3 Ball juggle

Racket sports The ability to use two or more body parts together

The differential rate an individual is able to perform a movement or cover a distance in a short period of time


Reaction Time

Ruler drop test

Football GK

The time between the presentation of a stimulus and the onset of movement

Agility

Illinois Test

Slalom Skier

The ability to change the position of the body quickly and to control movement of your whole body

Power

Standing Broad Shotput Jump/Sergeant jump

The ability to do strength performances quickly

7.

PRINCIPLES OF TRAINING – SPIRRR FITT

SPECIFICITY - Matching training to the requirements of an activity.

PROGRESSIVE OVERLOAD - To gradually increase the amount of overload so that fitness gains occur, but without potential for injury.

INDIVIDUAL NEEDS - Matching training to the requirements of an individual.

RECOVERY - The time required for the repair of damage to the body caused by training or competition.

REST - The period of time allotted to recovery

REVERSABILITY - Any adaptation that takes place as a consequence of training will be reversed when you stop training.


F.I.T.T Frequency, Intensity, Time, Type (used to increase the amount of work the body does, in order to achieve overload).

FREQUENCY - Increase how often you train, e.g. once, twice, three times a week

INTENSITY - Increase how hard you train

TIME - Increase the amount of time that you train for, e.g.20 mins, 30 mins, 40 mins.

TYPE - Change the type of training that you do.

8.

SMART TARGETS – GOAL SETTING

SPECIFIC - This means knowing exactly what the goal is.

MEASURABLE - This means that it will be easy to know if a goal has been achieved or not.

ACHIEVABLE - This means making sure the goal is challenging yet still able to be reached.

REALISTIC - A goal may be achievable in theory, but if it is to be achievable in practice it is necessary to have the time and resources to complete it.

TIME BOUND - Does your goal have an end point?

9.

METHODS OF TRAINING

INTERVAL - Defined as high intensity periods of work followed by periods of rest (repeated). Used in sports such as sprinting


CONTINUOUS - is steady training. There are no rest periods, and a session usually lasts for a minimum of 20 minutes. Used in sports such as long-distance running, swimming, cycling or rowing.

FARTLEK - Fartlek training is a form of continuous training that uses change in speed and terrain. Used in games such as Football, Netball, Rugby, Basketball, Hockey, Handball etc.

CIRCUIT - Circuit training is a type of training that combines a variety of exercises at stations. Used in all types of sports as long as the circuit is made specific to the sport (specificity is applied!)

WEIGHT - Weight training uses progressive resistance, leading to progressive overload. The weights provide a resistance for the muscles to work against, and is measured in ‘sets’ and ‘reps’. Can be used to improve muscular endurance and muscular strength based upon amount of reps and weight. Used in sports such as weightlifting, sprinting, Rugby.

CROSS - Cross Training involves using another sport or activity to improve your fitness. It happens when an athlete trains in a different environment. For example, a long-distance runner may train using longdistance cycling or swimming.

10.

PLANNING AN EXERCISE SESSION

An exercise session has 3 parts: 

Warm-up

Main activity

Cool down


Warm-up – this involves: 

Cardiovascular warm-up (pulse raiser)

Stretching (dynamic, static)

Main activity – training session or game

Cool down:

11.

Jogging

Stretching

Relaxation exercises

ANALYSING TRAINING SESSIONS AND TRAINING THRESHOLDS

This is important to monitor level and improvement. Key aspects: •

Heart rate – the number of times that the heart beats per minute (BPM)

Resting Heart rate – HR at rest.

Working heart rate - HR during or immediately after exercise. Shows the level of intensity you are working

Maximum Heart rate - 220 – age = maximum HR (BPM)

Target heart rate/target zone - 60% to 80% of Maximum heart rate.

Recovery rate - Is how long it takes a person’s heart rate to return to its resting level after exercise (in minutes) You need to be able to plot these elements on a graph like you have previously.




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