components of fitness

Cards (59)

  • fitness is the ability to meet the demands of your environment
  • health is a state of complete emotional, physical and social wellbeing
  • exercise is a physical activity done to maintain or improve health/fitness
  • performance is how well a task is completed
  • exercise can: decrease stress, improve health, increase fitness, prevent illness
  • exercise has physical, emotional and social benefits
  • emotional benefits of exercise: increase cardiovascular fitness, improve strength, improve muscular endurance, increase flexibility, improve body composition, improve performance
  • emotional benefits of exercise: relieve stress, psychological change, increase self esteem and confidence, help feel good, appreciate body shape, contribute to enjoyment of life
  • social benefits of exercise: mix with others, make new friends, develop teamwork skills, work with others
  • fitness tests are to monitor progress to show what you need to improve on by comparing it to averages
  • cardiovascular endurance
    your ability to exercise your whole body for long periods of time
  • muscular endurance
    your ability to use voluntary muscles repeatedly without getting tired
  • cardiovascular endurance
    • Harvard step test
    • 12 minute cooper run
  • muscular endurance
    • one minute sit up test
    • one minute press up test
  • strength
    you ability to exert force such as when you lift a weight
  • flexibility
    the range of motions of your joints ot the ability for your joints to move
  • strength
    • hand grip dynamometer
  • flexibility
    sit and reach
  • body composition
    the percentage of body weight that is muscle
  • body composition
    • BMI (body mass index)
  • agility
    • illinois agility test
  • agility
    the ability to control the movement of the whole body and change position quickly
  • balance
    being able to keep the body stable while at rest or in motion
  • co-ordination
    the ability to use two or more body parts together
  • power
    the ability to undertake strength performances quickly
  • power
    • vertical jump
  • reaction time
    the time in between the presentation of a stimulus and the onset of movement
  • speed
    the rate at which an individual can perform a movement or cover a distance
  • speed
    • 30m sprint test
  • we should test our fitness so we can set targets and improve
  • principles of training
    • specificity
    • progressive overload
    • overstraining
    • reversibility
    • thresholds of training
    • individual needs
    • FITT
  • specificity
    matching training to the particular requirements of an activity to ensure you are training the right muscles and body systems to help your performance
  • progressive overload
    gradually increasing the amount of overload and intensity to improve fitness without injury as the body can adapt and increase fitness
  • overtraining
    overtraining beyond your bodies ability to recover can lead to injury and prevent improvements so you need to ensure adequate rest and recovery and to set your workload at the right intensity and size
  • reversibility
    loosing fitness instead of progressing or remaining at the current level caused by a break from training (holiday, injury, off season)
  • thresholds of training
    a safe and effective level to train at
  • aerobic zone
    60-80% maximum heart rate
  • anaerobic zone
    80-90% maximum heart rate
  • individual needs
    the athletes needs have to be taken into account when planing a training programme
  • FITT principle
    • frequency
    • intensity
    • time
    • type