Presidential Fitness Test
Author: Thomas O'Brien based on
lesson by: thomas obrien 04/17/2008 05:12:00 PM EDT
TaskStream - Tools of Engagement
VITAL INFORMATION
Subject(s):
Physical
Education
Topic or Unit
of Study:
The students will
understand the concepts related to physical fitness. These concepts include
cardio, composition, flexibility, strength, and endurance for fitness. They will
also understand and develop speed, agility, reaction time, coordination, and
power for fitness.
The students will learn the definitions of the
following words.
1. cardio
2. composition
3.
flexibility
4. strength
5. endurance
6. speed
7.
agility
8. reaction time
9. coordination
10. power
A
worksheet will be provided containing the definitions of each word. This will be
gone over at the beginning of the first lesson dealing with
curl-ups.
Grade/Level:
6-12, Mastery Level
2.6
Objective:
The students will understand and develop cardio
composition, flexibility, and endurance for fitness. They will also be able to
understand what each term
means.
Summary:
The students will learn all of the
terms and techniques that are important for physical education and the
Presidential Fitness Test. These techniques will be displayed by the students
during their presidential fitness tests. The students will be required to pair
up into partners and complete each exercise.
These events will be found
on the web site: http://exchange.mail2web.com/exchweb/bin/redir.asp?URL=http://www.presidentschallenge.org/educators/program_details/physical_fitness/events.aspx
IMPLEMENTATION
Learning
Context:
These lessons are a major component
of physical education. These lessons will be a major component of their grade
for physical education. Each student will be evaluated based on their
performance and their behavior during each
exercise.
Procedure:
On Monday, the students will complete the
curl-ups portion of the Presidential Fitness test. The students will be shown
the correct demonstration of how to complete this test as well as the other
exercises for the week.
On Tuesday, the students will be shown and
complete the shuttle-run portion of the test. On Wednesday, the students will be
shown how to complete the endurance run and walk. On Friday, the students will
be asked to complete the pull-up portion of the test. The following Monday, the
students will be shown and asked to complete the V-sit portion of the
test.
As a reward the students will be allowed to play basketball,
volleyball, or Frisbee football. There will be a rubric in which the students
will be scored and evaluated on. They will be graded on their participation and
their behavior. The rubric will be attached to this
lesson.
Differentiated
Instruction:
The lessons will be modified based on
their ability to complete each exercise during the day. Such modifications will
be that the students will only have to complete certain portions of the tests.
There will also be time modifications for each test. One such example will be
that lessons will be extended depending on how much the students are able to
complete during each time
period.
Sample Student
Products:
Sample products will be
located on the following web site: http://exchange.mail2web.com/exchweb/bin/redir.asp?URL=http://www.presidentschallenge.org/educators/program_details/physical_fitness/events.aspx
Collaboration:
Students
will work
individually.
Time
Allotment:
5 class periods. 25
Min. per class.
Author's
Comments & Reflections:
Their
will be handouts provided with these lessons from the web site listed above.
Since each of my classes has an assistant. The teacher will have to collaborate
with the aide with each of these lessons. These lessons may be modified by
classroom participation and behavior. The teacher, aide, or any other staff may
modify this lesson based on this web site on the standards on this web
site:
http://exchange.mail2web.com/exchweb/bin/redir.asp?URL=http://www.presidentschallenge.org/educators/disabilities.aspx
A
copy of this web site will be provided for each staff member in the class. In
addition, students who have completed all of their assignments for both health
and physical education will be allowed to come to gym on Fun Friday based on
these criteria:
1. Appropriate behavior in ALL classes.
2.
Completion of their assignments in this class.
If the students do not
complete these criiteria, they will not be allowed in the gym on Fun
Friday.
MATERIALS
AND RESOURCES
Instructional Materials:
Define:
1. cardiovascular
fitness-“ Cardiovascular fitness requires the heart and blood vessels to supply
the working muscles with oxygen for long periods of time.” (Bitesize revision:
p.1). What are some examples of cardiovascular fitness?
2. Composition is
the composition of one’s own body. In other words, what is your body composed
of?
3. flexibility-“ Is an important part of fitness that we need to keep
into our old age. Babies have a natural suppleness and can suck their toes (not
that as a teenager you would probably want to do this still), we lose
flexibility as we grow older. We should always remember to warm up before
competition to stretch our muscles and tendons.” (Bitesize revision: p.1). Why
is it important that we have flexibility in our body?
4. strength-“Is
normally measured by the amount of weight the muscles can lift, or applying a
force against a resistance.” (Bitesize revision: p.2). How do we use strength
when it comes to physical fitness? Is it important for someone to have strength
when they are exercising?
5. endurance-Endurance is how long you can
obtain doing a certain activity. Think of a runner that is running a cross
country race. He/she needs endurance in order to be able to compete.
6.
speed-“Is the ability to perform a movement or cover a distance in a short
period of time. It is not just leg speed, that a sprinter would have, but
athletes throwing a javelin require arm speed as well” (Bitesize revision:
p.4).
7. agility-Is the ability to change the direction of the body
quickly. Goalkeepers and gymnasts are good examples of people who have this
ability” (Bitesize revision: p.4). Do runners and basketball players need to
have agility while running a race or playing a game?
8. reaction time-“Is
the time it takes to respond to a stimulus. The stimulus could be a starting
pistol, or a ball being returned over the net in tennis, or a goalkeeper moving
to get her body in line with the ball to save a shot in hockey, or a slip
fielder catching a ball. In a car, the driver is reacting all the time to
different stimuli and poor reaction time could lead to a crash” (Bitesize
revision: p.4). Why is it important to have reaction time in your daily life?
Please provide some examples.
9. coordination-“Is the ability to use
different senses and body parts together. Hand/eye co-ordination is needed when
hitting a moving ball in tennis, cricket and baseball. Foot/eye co-ordination is
needed when volleying a football” (Bitesize revision: p.4). Why is it important
to have good hand and eye coordination?
10. power-“In simple terms this
is "strength x speed" or doing strength movements quickly. A shot putter uses
power when moving a shot from his/her neck. A high jumper needs power in his/her
legs to lift their body, vertically, over the bar. A weight lifter powers the
bar up over his head.” (Bitesize revision: p.4).Why is power important when it
comes to physical education?
Retrieved April 17th from the website: http://exchange.mail2web.com/exchweb/bin/redir.asp?URL=http://www.bbc.co.uk/schools/gcsebitesize/pe/fitness/fitnessrev5.shtml
Resources:
* Materials and
resources:
Handouts from various web sites
will be provided. These web sites are located in the
lesson.
STANDARDS
& ASSESSMENT
Standards:
NJ- New Jersey Core Curriculum
Content Standards
• Subject :
Comprehensive Health and Physical Education
(2004)
• Standard 2.6:
(FITNESS) ALL STUDENTS WILL APPLY HEALTH-RELATED AND SKILL-RELATED FITNESS
CONCEPTS AND SKILLS TO DEVELOP AND MAINTAIN A HEALTHY, ACTIVE
LIFESTYLE.
• Range/Grade Level
0: Building upon knowledge and skills gained in preceding grades, by the
end of Grade 8, students will:
•
Strand A: Fitness and Physical
Activity
Cumulative
Progress Indicator 1 : Summarize the potential short- and long-term
physical, social, and emotional benefits of regular physical
activity.
Cumulative
Progress Indicator 2: Differentiate how body systems adapt to acute exercise vs.
regular exercise over a period of
time.
Cumulative Progress
Indicator 3: Predict how factors such as health status, interests, environmental
conditions, and available time impact personal
fitness.
Cumulative
Progress Indicator 4 : Analyze the positive and negative impacts of
technological advances on exercise, health, and
fitness.
Cumulative
Progress Indicator 5 : Describe ways to achieve a healthy body composition
through healthy eating and physical
activity.
Cumulative
Progress Indicator 6 : Distinguish between facts and fallacies regarding the
marketing of fitness products, services, and
information.
• Strand B :
Training
Cumulative
Progress Indicator 1: Recognize signs and symptoms that warrant exercise
termination and possible follow- up with a healthcare
professional.
Cumulative
Progress Indicator 2: Apply training principles to establish a progression of
activity that will improve each component of
fitness.
Cumulative
Progress Indicator 3 : Describe and demonstrate various training methods,
including isotonic, isometric, interval, and circuit
methods.
Cumulative
Progress Indicator 4 : Investigate the physical, behavioral, legal, and
competitive consequences of the use of anabolic steroids and other performance
enhancing substances.
• Strand C
: Achieving and Assessing
Fitness
Cumulative
Progress Indicator 1 : Engage in a variety of sustained, vigorous physical
activities that enhance each component of
fitness.
Cumulative
Progress Indicator 2: Perform at the intensity level needed to enhance
cardiovascular fitness, as determined by target heart rate, perceived exertion,
and recovery heart
rate.
Cumulative Progress
Indicator 3 : Monitor physiological responses before, during and after exercise
and compare
changes.
Cumulative
Progress Indicator 4 : Use health data and information from internal and
external sources to develop a personal fitness plan, and use technology to
evaluate the implementation and outcomes of the
plan.
Cumulative Progress
Indicator 5: Demonstrate age- and gender-specific progress towards
improving each component of
fitness.
• Range/Grade Level
0: Building upon knowledge and skills gained in preceding grades, by the
end of Grade 12, students will:
•
Strand A : Fitness and Physical
Activity
Cumulative
Progress Indicator 1: Predict the short- and long-term physical, social, and
emotional benefits and potential problems associated with regular physical
activity.
Cumulative
Progress Indicator 2: Summarize the causes, influences, and responses of
body systems during
exercise.
Cumulative
Progress Indicator 3: Describe how preventive healthcare, physiological
monitoring, hydration, a safe environment, and exercising with a partner
contribute to safe fitness
activities.
Cumulative
Progress Indicator 4: Evaluate the role of genetics, gender, age, nutrition,
activity level, and exercise type on body
composition.
• Strand B :
Training
Cumulative
Progress Indicator 1 : Develop and implement a training program to
maximize health benefits and prevent exercise-related injuries and
illnesses.
Cumulative
Progress Indicator 2 : Apply training principles to establish a progression of
activity that will improve each component of fitness and justify the use of each
principle.
Cumulative
Progress Indicator 3 : Compare and contrast the use of drugs, fitness products,
and fads to achieve fitness.
•
Strand C : Achieving and Assessing
Fitness
Cumulative
Progress Indicator 2 : Perform at the intensity level needed to enhance
cardiovascular fitness, monitor physiological responses before, during, and
after exercise, and modify exercise appropriately in
response.
Cumulative
Progress Indicator 3: Assess personal level of fitness, design a personal
fitness plan considering current health and fitness status, goals and interests,
skill level, accessibility and costs, and use technology to implement, monitor,
and evaluate the
plan.
Cumulative Progress
Indicator 4 : Demonstrate age and gender-specific progress towards the
achievement of fitness goals for each component of health-related and
skill-related
fitness.
Cumulative
Progress Indicator 5 : Modify a fitness plan to accommodate for injury,
illness, pregnancy, aging, and
disability.
Cumulative
Progress Indicator 6 : Discuss the use of body mass index, body fat percentage,
and fat deposition as measures of
fitness.
Cumulative
Progress Indicator 1 : Engage in a variety of sustained, vigorous physical
activities to enhance each component of fitness.