9-18181 WA2-2003 Fitness Gr8 ADP 5-1-03 i

    Fitness Performance

    Assessment

    A Classroom-Based Assessment

    for Washington Students

    Grade 8

    A Component of the

    Washington State Assessment

     

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    ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

    Health Fitness Award c hart adapted from The President� s Challenge Physical

    Activity and Fitness Awards Program booklet. Reprinted by permission.

    Standards for Healthy F itness Zone Charts from Fitnessgram: T est Administration

    Manual. Reprinted with permission of The Cooper Institute, Dallas, TX.

    FITNESSGRAM� is a registered trademark of The Cooper Institute for Aerobic

    Research.

    Copyright � 2003 by W ashington Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction. All

    rights reserved. Educational institutions within the State of Washington have

    permission to reproduce this document. All other individuals wishing to reproduce this

    document must contact OSPI.

     

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    A Model for Conducting Fitness Performance Assessments

    Introduction

    F itness assessments encompass a variety of measures designed to provide

    individualized feedbac k regarding one�s overall fitness status and/or

    physiological responses to physical effort. Fitness assessments can and should

    be developmentally appropriate.

    Fitness assessments may include �traditional� assessments such as those of

    VO

    2

    max with the one-mile w alking test, or more simplistic assessments of

    basic physiological responses suc h as heart rate during moderate physical

    activity. The purpose of fitness assessments is not solely to rate an individual�s

    fitness. In fact, an education assessment might provide physiological feedback

    regarding a process that can then be used to explain and illustrate

    fundamental fitness principles. A simple measure of resting heart rate, followed

    by a determination of heart rate during exercise, followed by an assessment of

    recovery heart rate can constitute a broad interpretation of what fitness

    assessments represent in an educational setting. Such an assessment:

    � provides physiological feedbac k for the student, and

    � can be used to illustrate important concepts regarding how heart rate

    responses vary dependent upon cardiovascular fitness level.

    Although fitness assessments provide some �concrete� information, they are not

    without fla ws and concerns. Fitness assessments should not be used without

    careful consideration of the benefits and ramifications they might bring to a

    learning environment. The following is a short list of what fitness assessments

    can do and a list of what they cannot do.

    F itness assessments should be used in the curriculum to:

    � provide an opportunity to teac h and reinforce essential concepts related

    to the benefits and importance of choosing to live a healthy lifestyle now

    and in the future

    � provide an opportunity to teach students how to self-assess their own

    health-related fitness throughout their lives

    � provide students with confidential baseline information from which

    accurate and reasonable short-term and long-term fitness and activity

    goals can be established

    � provide a forum for teaching students the theory, rationale, accuracy

    and appropriate use of fitness assessments throughout their lives, and

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    � provide an opportunity to critically reflect on how individual differences,

    inc luding genetic and maturity levels and/or goal setting and personal

    programming accuracies or errors, might have impacted perceived or

    expected fitness progress.

    F itness assessments should not be used in the curriculum to:

    � evaluate the effectiveness of a curriculum in physical education, health,

    or fitness

    � evaluate the effectiveness of teaching

    � determine to any degree student grades in physical education, health, or

    fitness

    � make blind assumptions regarding student physical activity levels

    � prove student health status, or

    � provide a basis for punishment or rewards.

    Specific Issues and Special Concer ns in Conducting Fitness

    Assessments of Children and Youth

    Developmental and Physiological Considerations�A Brief Synopsis

    Issues in Cardiorespiratory Functioning

    Aerobic function expressed as a relative measure of oxygen consumption

    (VO

    2

    peak in ml/kg/min) is similar between children, adolescents, and adults.

    However, the biomec hanical efficiency of movement is considerably

    compromised in younger c hildren and pre-adolescents. This biomechanical

    disadvantage makes locomotor skills utilized in most fitness assessments of

    VO

    2

    peak more costly in c hildren compared to adults. As such, VO

    2

    peak

    represents the physiological functioning of the cardiorespiratory system in

    c hildren and youth but fails to be a strong reflection of cardiorespiratory

    endurance. In other words, children and youth might be unduly fatigued due to

    biomec hanical disadvantages in movement patterns. As children grow, the

    movement patterns become more efficient and allow for an �artificial�

    improvement of VO

    2

    peak to be achieved (or for VO

    2

    peak to remain unchanged

    despite actual reductions in the physiological capacity of the aerobic system).

    The implication of this is that the tracking of VO

    2

    measures over time is likely

    to be positively influenced by naturally occurring improvements in

    biomechanical movement patterns.

     

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    Maximum heart rate is higher in c hildren and adolescents than in adults.

    Children and adolescents ha ve lower stroke volume, which is partially

    compensated for by an increase in heart rate. However, total cardiac output

    remains lower than that of adults until the late teenage years. The implication

    of this is that predictions of maximum heart rate (such as 220 � age) are less

    useful for c hildren or early adolescents. This is a critical issue as most field

    tests of cardiorespiratory endurance use an estimate of maximum heart rate as

    a fundamental point to which submaximal responses are extrapolated (such

    extrapolations are the basis for most prediction equations).

    Because c hanges pertaining to the cardiorespiratory system will be dependent

    upon maturational timing (rather than chronological age), attempting to adjust

    for c hanges based solely on chronological age becomes problematic. Early- or

    late-maturing adolescents will be adversely affected by such adjustments.

    Finally, to further complicate the above issues, differences exist between boys

    and girls with regard to the pattern of change seen over time. For boys, relative

    measures of VO

    2

    peak remain largely unc hanged between the ages of 8 and 16

    before beginning a gradual decline into adulthood. However, girls show a rather

    constant dec line in relative measures of VO

    2

    peak beginning sometime between

    the ages of 10 and 12. These c hanges are due in part to maturational factors

    including, but not limited to, c hanges in body composition. The implication of

    this is that the trac king of relative fitness measures over time might

    inadvertently benefit boys over girls, even when activity levels between both

    groups are similar.

    Issues in Muscular F

    itness

    Musc le fiber number and type is fixed within the first year of life. As a result,

    there is a large genetic and uncontrolled factor governing musculoskeletal

    performance of humans. However, most health-related thresholds are

    reasonable and can be accomplished by the vast majority of individuals with

    training. Nerve development, motor unit activation, muscle fiber size, and

    testosterone are all lower in the child/prepubertal adolescent than in adults.

    As a result, they exhibit less strength, power, and muscular endurance per unit

    of weight than adults. Due to musculoskeletal immaturity, maximum strength

    testing should be avoided in c hildren and young adolescents.

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    There are minimal differences in strength measures between boys and girls

    before puberty. However , during and after puberty, boys increase muscle mass

    and girls increase fat mass under the influence of testosterone and estrogen,

    respectively.

    1

    The gap in maximal strength measures widens between the sexes

    as maturity progresses, becoming more evident in upper body versus lower

    body locations.

    The practical implication of these differences suggests that muscular strength

    and endurance assessments will naturally improve for boys, even without

    physical activity or effort, and will naturally tend to decrease in girls, even

    with regular physical activity. A s such, assessments of these components must

    account for these changes.

    P oor flexibility is typically not an issue for children and adolescents. However,

    despite popular conceptions, children are not always more flexible than adults ,

    and girls are not alwa ys more flexible than boys. Some patterns that have been

    established with regard to particular muscle groups/joints include:

    � Anterior lumbar flexibility decreases during adolescence in both boys and

    girls, but regains earlier levels of flexibility during adulthood.

    � Lateral spinal flexibility increases during adolescence and then declines

    throughout adulthood.

    � Hamstring flexibility (as measured by the Sit-and-Reach) improves

    consistently in girls ages 5�18, but exhibits a �U-shaped progression� in

    boys, and the values for girls are generally higher than for boys.

    During periods of rapid growth, the musculoskeletal structures become tighter

    across joints, potentially temporarily impacting performance (and increasing

    injury risk) on flexibility measures. The practical implications suggest that

    flexibility as tested by common measures may be somewhat subject to

    individual differences in maturation and growth rates.

    Issues in Body Composition

    Body composition is a complex and controversial topic, even without adding in

    the considerable developmental issues.

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    Body composition testing in sc hools should take the following into

    consideration:

    1. There are significant methodological concerns with body composition

    testing in general, and the most commonly used techniques in schools

    are fraught with the most potential for error.

    2. Interpretation of results is not clear-cut or agreed upon, especially

    when dealing with the results of children and adolescents.

    3. F atness as an independent risk factor for disease is not without

    considerable legitimate argument (such as the well-established

    overriding effects of regular physical activity in attenuating disease

    risk).

    4. Results of tests, accurate or not, can inadvertently reinforce cultural

    prejudices and ma y serve to further accentuate obsessions with

    thinness, feelings of fatness, and related negative health behaviors.

    When body composition is conducted in schools, comprehensive and

    accurate education about body composition (including genetic

    influences/individual differences , fat distribution patterning issues, assessment

    limitations, how to interpret results responsibly and in a greater context of

    health/fitness, how physical activity and exercise can help to maintain the best

    body composition for eac h individual but not the same composition for all

    individuals, etc .) should be provided and supplemented with optional body

    composition testing. If testing is done, testing procedures and results should be

    kept confidential.

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    Common Questions and Answers Regarding Fitness Assessments

    W hat are criterion-referenced standards?

    Criterion-referenced standards are predetermined standards of performance

    tied to specified domains of behavior. Health-related criterion-referenced

    standards attempt to establish the minimal threshold of a fitness measure that

    is necessary for the attenuation of disease risk. Criterion-referenced standards

    are different from norm-referenced standards. Norm-referenced standards

    compare student performance on a test to the scores of other students having

    common characteristics. Such standards offer no comparison to any meaningful

    health criterion, and often serve to dissuade or discourage children who rank in

    the lower percentages.

    Despite the advantages of using criterion-referenced standards (primarily

    inc luding the potential for all to succeed and the apparent connection to

    meaningful health information), it must be noted that most criterion-referenced

    standards set for c hildren and youth are based on normative scores, empirical

    evidence, and judgment, not on scientific studies.

    2,3

    This is understandable,

    given that c hildren and youth do not generally suffer from chronic illness or die

    from lifestyle-related diseases. Thus, it is impossible to truly establish

    threshold levels that are scientifically meaningful. Nonetheless, criterion-

    referenced standards are deemed more appropriate for use in the

    interpretation of fitness assessments than are norm-referenced standards.

    How do fitness assessments, if they aren�t good, correlate to health

    or activity in youth?

    F itness assessments are valuable learning tools and can be used to personalize

    and reinforce important concepts. They also allow for meaningful and relevant

    fitness and activity goals to be set that follow the principles of overload and

    progression. As long as students understand their inherent limitations and use

    them in the context of comprehensive fitness education, fitness assessments

    are meaningful and valuable.

    Should I grade students based on their scores?

    Since fitness assessments are greatly influenced by maturational timing,

    genetics, gender, body type, body size, and body mechanics, and are less

    influenced by time or effort spent in physical activity, it is inappropriate to tie

    fitness assessment scores to student grades.

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    Is it okay to grade students based on their improvement from the beginning of

    the semester to the end?

    Due to maturation, most students will post improvements in fitness

    assessments without any effort up through puberty. Following puberty, it is

    unlikely that time spent in physical education will result in significant gains

    in fitness for all students. Furthermore, students who are engaged in

    extracurricular activities will have an advantage over students who are not

    engaged in extracurricular activities.

    Although some might view this as acceptable (or even desirable), it creates

    unethical and unintentional discrimination against those students who are

    unable to be active outside of school due to socioeconomical, cultural, or other

    barriers beyond their personal control. Furthermore, error in the accuracy of

    prediction equations (the basis for most assessments) can hide or exaggerate

    true c hange in unpredictable ways. Finally, students may try to �beat the

    system� by intentionally performing below their ability on the pretest, in order

    to assure improvement on the posttest.

    4

    Therefore, it is probably not wise to

    use improvement scores as a required component of a student�s grade.

    How do I make time to do all of these fitness assessments?

    Testing students in a �pull out� is time-consuming and compromises overall

    supervision of activities. Ha ving students self-assess or peer-assess fitness can

    be a viable and defensible wa y to save time and achieve learning objectives.

    Conducting mass testing, establishing a testing circuit, or using partners for

    testing are recognized strategies . However, if peer assessments are used, it is

    critical that students be permitted to self-select their partners. Potential

    inaccuracies from the lack of testing experience must be clearly acknowledged

    when peer - or self-assessment strategies are employed.

    W on�t allowing students to self-assess their fitness create even more error?

    Yes. Again, what is the purpose of the testing and what is the philosophy and

    goal of the educational program? Rarely is �accurately assessing the fitness

    levels of students� a high priority objective within a quality educational

    program.

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    W hy isn�t student improvement a reflection of the curriculum or my teaching?

    Student improvement in fitness measures is more closely related to

    maturational timing, genetics, gender, body type, body size, and body mechanics

    than to effort or time spent in physical activity. Regardless, excellent teac hing

    implies that learning has occurred. Measures of physical fitness have no

    established correlation to knowledge or understanding of fitness concepts. On

    the other hand, assessments that demonstrate a student�s ability to apply

    fitness concepts and principles to real-life situations can be used to evaluate

    program effectiveness.

    Introductory comments prepared by Karen E. McConnell, Ph.D, CHES, and

    reviewed by Pam Tollefsen, R.N., M.Ed, Office of Superintendent of Public

    Instruction.

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    Cited References:

    1. Plowman, S. S. �Children Aren�t Miniature Adults: Similarities and

    Differences in Physiological Responses to Exercise.� ACSM�s Health and Fitness

    Journal 5 (2001): 5�6.

    2. Corbin, C. B. �Physical Activity for Everyone: What Every Educator Should

    Know About Promoting Lifelong Physical Activity.� JTPE 21, no. 2 (January

    2002).

    3. Corbin, C. B. �Physical F itness in the K�12 Curriculum: Some Defensible

    Solutions to Perennial Problems.� JOPERD 58, no. 7 (1987): 49�57.

    4. Strand, B. N., Scantling, E., and Johnson, M. Fitness Education: Teac hing

    Concepts Based F itness in the Schools. Scottsdale, Arizona: Gorsuch Scarisbrick

    Publishers, 1997.

    Additional References:

    Allsbrook, L. �Fitness Should Fit Children.� JOPERD , (August 1992): 47�49.

    Bouchard, C. �Heredity and Health-related Fitness.� Physical Activity and

    Fitness Researc h Digest 1, no. 4 (1987): 1�8.

    Bouchard, C., Shephard, R.J. and Stephens, T., eds. Physical Activity, F itness

    and Health: International Proceedings and Consensus Statement. Champaign,

    Illinois: Human Kinetics, 1994.

    Brynteson, P., and Adams, T. M. �The Effects of Conceptually Based Physical

    Education Programs on Attitudes and Exercise Habits of College Alumni After

    2 to 11 Years of Follow-up.� Research Quarterly f or Exercise and Sport. 64, no. 2

    (1993): 208�212.

    Cureton, K. J. and Warren, G. L. �Criterion-referenced Standards for Youth

    Health-related Fitness Tests: A Tutorial.� Research Quarterly f or Exercise and

    Sport 61, no. 1 (1990): 7�19.

    Pangrazi, R. P., and Corbin, C. B. �Physical Activity for Children and Youth.�

    JOPERD 67, no. 4 (1996): 38�43.

    Pangrazi, R. P. and Corbin, C. B. �Physical Fitness: Questions Teachers Ask.�

    JOPERD 64, no. 7 (1993): 14�19.

    Pangrazi, R. P., Corbin, C. B., and Welk, G. �Physical Activity for Children and

    Youth.� JOPERD 67, no. 4 (April 1996).

    Park, R. J. �Measurement of Physical Fitness: A Historical Perspective.�

    ODPHP Monograph Series (1991): 1�37.

    Slava, S., et al. �Long T erm Effects of a Conceptual Physical Education

    Program.� Research Quarterly f or Exercise and Sport 55, no. 2 (1984): 161�168.

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    Assessment Administration Considerations

    This model fitness assessment is provided to assist sc hools not currently using

    one of the most commonly a vailable fitness assessments (such as the

    Fitnessgram and the President�s Challenge ) to provide items that can be used

    in conjunction with instruction for students in grades 5, 8, and high school. It is

    not intended to replace fitness assessments already in use. It is hoped that a

    fitness assessment will be used to assist students in learning how they can

    self-assess and monitor their own fitness levels throughout their lives, analyze

    their results, set goals, and create a plan to maintain or improve their

    measurements.

    A suggested student record form and a fitness planning log/journal are

    provided to assist in connecting the performance of fitness assessments to

    understanding how they apply to the health and fitness essential academic

    learning requirements.

    More than one option of measurement is provided for each component of

    fitness. For some options, additional instructions are provided to assist in

    preparing to conduct a fitness assessment for your students.

    Car

    dior espirator y�options

    One-Mile Run �Grades 5, 8, and High Sc hool

    Students who ha ve not experienced running this distance should be provided an

    opportunity at least several da ys prior to the assessment date to run/walk this

    distance. This will allow them to experience the length of the course and to

    realize how pacing will help them to do their best.

    The Pacer �Grade 5

    Teachers ma y obtain a copy of a tape or CD for this assessment from the

    Cooper Institute for Aerobic Research or from Human Kinetics.

    Step Test �Grade 8 and High School

    This assessment requires students to step to a 4-beat cadence. This can be

    provided through a tape or CD created by the teacher or by use of a

    metronome. The pace calls for 96 beats per minute for a stepping rate

    of 24 completed steps per minute. The YMCA protocol provides for a 12-inch

    bench height. A prerecorded tape is available from Fitnessgram , Human

    Kinetics.

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    Time in the T arget Heart Rate (THR) Zone �Grade 8 and High School

    Walk Test �Grade 8 and High School

    Muscular F

    itness�options

    Flexed-Arm Hang �Grades 5, 8, and High Sc hool

    Pull-Ups �Grades 5, 8, and High Sc hool

    Modified Pull-Ups �Grades 5, 8, and High Sc hool

    Push-Ups �Grades 5, 8, and High Sc hool

    Note: An additional option to this assessment would be a modified push-up in which

    the student lea ves both the feet and knees on the floor.

    Curl-Ups �Grades 5, 8, and High Sc hool

    Fle

    xibility�options

    Sit-and-Reach �Grades 5, 8, and High Sc hool

    This option requires a modified box approximately twelve inches high with a

    yardstic k secured on the top. The yardstick extends over the top of the box with

    the nine-inc h mark at the edge of the box nearest the student.

    Trunk Lift (Prone Arm Lift) �Grades 5, 8, and High Sc hool

    V Sit-and-Reach �Grades 5, 8, and High Sc hool

    Bod

    y Composition�options

    The concept of body composition is important for students to understand. Body

    composition is complex in its implications to many students. In terms of its

    relationship to overall fitness, levels of physical activity may be a better

    measure than body composition. Actual assessment of this component of fitness

    is provided as an option at the high-school level. Only one of the options

    included in this model, the skin caliper measurement, actually provides a

    measure for percentage of lean body mass or percentage of body fat. The body

    mass index measures the ratio of body weight to body height. It cannot actually

    determine the percentage of body fat and lean body mass.

    Many sc hools use a variety of other resources to measure body fat percentages.

    Reliability for most of them is subject to variables including hydration, time of

    day, and medications a student may be taking.

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    Body composition measurements should be offered only as an option for

    students and in a private setting . Prior to conducting body composition

    measurements, students should receive instruction about the positive and

    negative elements of body fat, the importance of balance in eating patterns,

    and physical activity and the normal genetic variations in body structure, as

    well as differences between males and females.

    Skin Caliper �High School

    Body Mass Index �High School

    Norms and Standar

    ds�options

    Norms and standards are a vailable from several sources for each of the

    assessments provided. Those most commonly used in schools include:

    The President� s Challenge Physical Fitness Program

    400 East 7

    th

    Street, Bloomington, IN 47405-3085

    www .indiana.edu/~preschal

    FITNESSGRAM, Human Kinetics

    P.O. Box 5076, Champaign, IL 61825-5076

    www .americanfitness.net

    Norms and standards are included in the Appendix.

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    Student Name ________________________________________

    Fitness Name of Test Practice Score(s) Best Score DateComponent

    STUDENT FITNESS ASSESSMENT RECORD

    Student Name ________________________________________

    Fitness Name of Test Practice Score(s) Best Score DateComponent

    STUDENT FITNESS ASSESSMENT RECORD

     

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    My Fitness Journal

    Name: ____________________________________________________________

    Date: _____________________________________________________________

    Fitness Component: ______________________________________________

    Name of Assessment: _____________________________________________

    Measurement Results:

    Analysis of Results:

    My goal for this component of fitness:

    My plan for reaching this goal (inc lude principles of FITT) :

    Meeting My Goals:

    Barriers that could affect my plan:

    Strategies to overcome these barriers:

    Identify two forms of physical activity you enjoy and describe

    how they will help you meet your fitness goal:

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    Assessment Activity: One-Mile Run

    Fitness Category: Cardiorespiratory Endurance

    Testing Procedure:

    The teac her will select a one-mile flat course, free of obstacles or safety

    concerns.

    The teacher will use a stopwatch to measure how long it takes a student to

    complete a one-mile run.

    The student will:

    � warm up

    � start to run on the teacher� s call

    � pace him- or herself by finding a comfortable pace that is maintainable

    for the entire mile

    � be permitted to w alk if he or she can no longer run; however, when

    walking, the student should try to walk at a fast pace instead of strolling.

    The teac her will inform the student of his or her time as he or she crosses the

    finish line.

    The student will record his or her time on the individual record form. Norms

    can be used to help students assess their measurements. Norms and standards

    have been inc luded in the Appendix.

    Activities to Improve Results: Y our fitness program should include

    activities that use the cardiorespiratory system for 20 or more minutes, three

    to four times per week. Recommended heart rate levels during the activities

    should be between 60% and 80% of your maximum heart rate for improvement

    to occur.

    An aerobic warm up should be inc luded in all daily activities. Perform activities

    including, but not limited to, the following: running, walking, swimming, cross-

    country skiing, and sports. Aerobic dance activities are highly recommended.

    Inc lude circuit training as a regular part of your program to promote

    improvement.

    Performance Tasks

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    Assessment Activity: Step Test

    Fitness Category: Cardiorespiratory Endurance

    Testing Procedure:

    The teac her will select a step height that is age appropriate. A 12-inch step is

    recommended. The teac her should check to make sure it does not place an

    excessive strain on the knee. Before the students begin the assessment, the

    teac her should demonstrate alternating stepping cadence and set metronome.

    The student will:

    � begin the test when the CD, t ape, or video starts

    � begin a 4-beat cadence on the signal, starting with the right foot (up

    right, up left, down right, down left)

    � continue the test for 3 minutes

    � stop at the end of the 3-minute exercise and immediately (within 5

    seconds) sit down and begin taking his or her pulse for 1 full minute.

    During the assessment, the teacher should monitor the students to ensure they

    can complete the test without extreme fatigue. If students are self-testing, they

    should work in pairs to promote safety.

    Performance Tasks

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    The student will record the count of his or her pulse on the individual record

    form. Norms can be used to help students assess their measurements. Norms

    and standards have been inc luded in the Appendix.

    Activities to Improve Results: Y our fitness program should include

    activities that use the cardiorespiratory system for 20 or more minutes, three

    to four times per week. Recommended heart rate levels during the activities

    should be between 60% and 80% of your maximum heart rate for improvement

    to occur.

    An aerobic warm up should be inc luded in all daily activities. Perform activities

    including, but not limited to, the following: running, walking, swimming, cross-

    country skiing, and sports. Aerobic dance activities are highly recommended.

    Inc lude circuit training as a regular part of your program to promote

    improvement.

    Performance Tasks

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    Assessment Activity: Time in the T arget Heart Rate (THR) Zone

    F itness Category: Cardiorespiratory Endurance

    Testing Procedure:

    The student will:

    � calculate his or her THR by determining 60% to 80% of his or her

    maximum heart rate

    � do an aerobic activity for a certain amount of time and try to elevate his

    or her heart rate to stay in the THR zone

    An example of this would be to run for 15 minutes. The distance the students

    are to cover is not important; their goal is to elevate their heart rate to the

    THR zone and keep it there as long as they are able until the test is over.

    Maximum heart rate (MHR) and THR are determined by the following

    formulas:

    220 . age = Max. HR . .60

    220 age = Max. HR .80

    The student will record his or her time at the THR zone on the individual

    record form. Norms can be used to help students assess their measurements.

    Norms and standards have been inc luded in the Appendix.

    Activities to Improve Results: A fitness program that inc ludes activities

    that use the cardiorespiratory system for 20 or more minutes, three to four

    times per week. Recommended heart rate levels during the activities should be

    between 60% and 80% of your maximum heart rate for improvement to occur.

    An aerobic w arm up should be included in all daily activities. Perform

    activities including, but not limited to, the following: running, walking,

    swimming, cross-country skiing, and sports. Aerobic dance activities are highly

    recommended. Inc lude circuit training as a regular part of your program to

    promote improvement.

    Performance Tasks

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    >

    THR range of 60�80% of MHR

     

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    Assessment Activity: Walk Test

    Fitness Category: Cardiorespiratory Endurance

    Testing Procedure:

    The student will:

    � walk one mile as quic kly as he or she can, but at a pace that can be

    maintained

    � cross the finish line and be given his or her time

    � take a 15-second heart rate and multiply it by 4 to determine 1-minute

    pulse rate.

    The student� s time and heart rate will be entered into a computer that will

    compute the VO

    2

    max. The VO

    2

    max can also be calculated using a special

    equation.

    Estimated VO

    2

    max (ml/kg/min) 132.853

    (0.0769 body weight [in pounds])

    (0.3877 age [years])

    (6.3150 gender [female 0; male 1])

    (3.2649 1-mile w alk time [in minutes and seconds])

    (0.1565 1-minute heart rate at end of mile [beats per

    minute])

    For example, consider a 25-year -old male who weighed 185 pounds. He walked a

    mile in 15:26 and had a heart rate of 175 beats per minute after the walking

    test.

    Estimated VO

    2

    max (ml/kg/min) 132.853

    (0.0769 185) 14.23

    (0.3877 25) 9.69

    (6.3150 1) 6.3150

    (3.2649 [15

    2

    6

    6

    0

    ]) 49.40

    (0.1565 175) 27.39

    The answer after this calculation is: 38.458 ml/kg/min.

    Or go to www .exrx.net/calculators/Rockport.html. This site will conduct

    calculations for you.

    The student will record his or her VO

    2

    max number on the individual record

    form. Norms can be used to help students assess their measurements. Norms

    and standards have been inc luded in the Appendix.

    Performance Tasks

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    Activities to Improve Results: Y our fitness program should include

    activities that use the cardiorespiratory system for 20 or more minutes, three

    to four times per week. Recommended heart rate levels during the activities

    should be between 60% and 80% of your maximum heart rate for improvement

    to occur.

    An aerobic warm up should be inc luded in all daily activities. Perform activities

    including, but not limited to, the following: running, walking, swimming, cross-

    country skiing, and sports. Aerobic dance activities are highly recommended.

    Inc lude circuit training as a regular part of your program

    to promote improvement.

    Performance Tasks

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    Assessment Activity: Flexed-Arm Hang

    Fitness Category: Muscular Endurance

    T esting Procedure:

    The student will:

    � grab the horizontal bar with an overhand grip, palms facing forward

    � be assisted so that his or her arms are flexed, chin is above the bar, and

    body hangs straight down.

    A spotter ma y hold a rigid arm against the student�s legs to prevent the

    student from swinging. As soon as this position is reached, the teacher will

    start a stopwatch. Time is stopped when the student�s chin touches or goes

    below the bar, or the head tilts back.

    The student will record his or her time on the individual record form. Norms

    can be used to help students assess their measurements. Norms and standards

    have been inc luded in the Appendix.

    Activities to Improve Results: P erform the flexed-arm hang two to three

    times a week and do sets of regular pull-ups two to three times a week.

    Performance Tasks

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    Performance Tasks

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    22

    Assessment Activity: Pull-Ups

    Fitness Category: Muscular Endurance

    T esting Procedure:

    The student will:

    � grasp a horizontal bar above the head with palms facing forward and

    arms fully extended

    � raise his or her body until the chin is above the bar

    � lower him- or herself until the arms are fully extended.

    If the student fails to either get the c hin above the bar or to fully extend the

    arms when lowering the body, or if he or she swings or bends the legs to aid the

    motion, it is a correction. The test ends when the student receives two

    corrections.

    The student will record his or her number completed on the individual record

    form. Norms can be used to help students assess their measurements. Norms

    and standards have been inc luded in the Appendix.

    Activities to Improve Results: P erform sets of pull-ups and sets of

    partner -assisted pull-ups and practice the flexed-arm hang two to three

    times a week.

     

    23

    Assessment Activity: Modified Pull-Ups

    F itness Category: Muscular Endurance

    Testing Procedure:

    The teac her will provide a modified pull-up bar with a parallel elastic band

    stretched 7 to 8 inc hes below the bar.

    The student will:

    � lie facing up under the modified pull-up bar

    � be assisted in grabbing the bar with the palms facing toward the feet

    � begin with straight arms and only the heels touching the floor

    � pull his or her straight body toward the bar until the chin is above the

    elastic band (an alternate method is to require the student to raise the

    c hin as high as the bar).

    If the student stops to rest or fails to keep the body straight, it is a correction.

    The test ends when the student receives two corrections, and the partner will

    tell the student how many pull-ups were completed.

    The student will record his or her number completed on the individual record

    form. Norms can be used to help students assess their measurements. Norms

    and standards have been inc luded in the Appendix.

    Activities to Improve Results: P erform sets of modified pull-ups two to three

    times a week.

    Performance Tasks

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    Assessment Activity: Push-Ups

    Fitness Category: Muscular Endurance

    T esting Procedure:

    The student will:

    � lie face-down on a mat with the hands beneath the shoulders and the

    palms down and elbows up; the legs will be straight and slightly apart,

    and the toes will be bent forward

    � raise the body until the arms are fully extended, and then lower the body

    until the upper and lower arms form a right angle (the body should be

    held in a straight line, from head to heels, during each repetition)

    � complete one push-up approximately every three seconds.

    The partner will count the number completed. If the student slows to rest, fails

    to fully extend the arms, or neglects to lower him- or herself until the

    90-degree angle is formed, it is a correction. The test ends after the second

    correction, and the partner will tell the student how many push-ups were

    completed.

    Performance Tasks

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    25

    The student will record his or her number completed on the individual record

    form. Norms can be used to help students assess their measurements. Norms

    and standards have been inc luded in the Appendix.

    Activities to Improve Results: P erform sets of push-ups or modified

    push-ups (instead of being on the toes, rest on the knees and perform push-ups)

    two to three times a week.

    Performance Tasks

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    Assessment Activity: Curl-Ups

    Fitness Category: Muscular Endurance

    T esting Procedure:

    The student will:

    � lie on his or her back on a gym mat with both feet flat on the floor and

    the knees bent (a partner will hold the head and count how many

    curl-ups are completed)

    � have both arms crossed, with the hands on the opposite shoulders; hands

    and arms remain in contact with the body; the objective is to isolate the

    abdominals

    � pull his or her belly button towards the spine and flatten the lower back

    against the floor

    � slowly contract his or her abdominals, bringing the shoulder blades one

    to two inches off the floor

    � exhale as he or she comes up, keeping the neck straight and chin up

    � return to the starting position.

    This will be performed for one timed minute. The partner will tell the student

    the number of curl-ups completed in this time.

    The student will record his or her number completed on the individual record

    form. Norms can be used to help students assess their measurements. Norms

    and standards have been inc luded in the Appendix.

    Activities to Improve Results: P erform sets of curl-ups throughout

    the week.

    Performance Tasks

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    Assessment Activity: Sit-and-Reach

     

     

    Fitness Category: Flexibility

    Testing Procedure:

    Prior to participating in flexibility measurements, students should engage in

    mild cardiorespiratory activities such as brisk walking or slow jogging to w arm

    up muscle groups.

    The student will:

    � remove shoes, sit on the floor, and place the bottom of one foot against the

    interior w all of a modified box (the other leg will be bent such that the

    foot is on the ground a few inc hes from the inside of the first knee)

    � place one hand on top of the other, palms facing down, and slowly lean

    forw ard until he or she feels slight discomfort

    � repeat this four times and hold the last one for one second so that the

    partner can measure and record the reach.

    The student will repeat the exercise for the other leg. The leg being measured

    must remain straight, and the hands must move forward evenly. The hips must

    also remain square to the box.

    The student will record his or her distances on the individual record form.

    Norms can be used to help students assess their measurements. Norms and

    standards have been inc luded in the Appendix.

    Activities to Improve Results: Stretch on a daily basis, before and after

    exercising. Develop a stretching routine that will work all the muscles in

    the body.

    Performance Tasks

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    Assessment Activity: Tr unk Lift (Prone Arm Lift)

    Fitness Category: Flexibility

    Testing Procedure:

    The student will:

    � lie face-down holding a ruler or a stick in both hands; fists should be

    tight and facing down

    � raise his or her arms and the stick as high as possible; forehead should

    remain on the floor and the arms should remain straight

    � remain still while a spotter measures the height of the stick with a ruler

    � return to resting position.

    The spotter will tell the student the distance between the ground and ruler.

    The student will record the height on the individual record form. Norms can be

    used to help students assess their measurement. Norms and standards have

    been included in the Appendix.

    Activities to Improve Results: To increase your lower-bac k strength,

    perform toe-touching exercises, while using a straight back and bringing the

    trunk up to a standing position.

    Performance Tasks

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    Assessment Activity: V Sit-and-Reach

    F itness Category: Flexibility

    Testing Procedure:

    The teac her will mark two lines on the floor forming a capital �T.� The top line

    of the �T� should measure two feet long. The leg of the �T� is the measuring line

    and should have inc h increments numbered on it, totaling four feet.

    The student will:

    � remove both shoes

    � sit centered on the leg of the �T�

    � overlap his or her hands, so the ends of the fingers are the same, with the

    palms facing down

    � hold the legs eight to twelve inches apart, with both feet immediately

    behind the top line of the �T�

    � loc k both knees and reach as far forward as possible.

    On the third attempt, the student is told to hold the stretch. The third attempt

    will be recorded.

    The student will record his or her measurement on the individual record form.

    Norms can be used to help students assess their measurements. Norms and

    standards have been inc luded in the Appendix.

    Activities to Improve Results: Stretch on a daily basis, before and after

    exercising. Develop a stretching routine that will work all the muscles in

    the body.

    Performance Tasks

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    Appendix

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    31

    Partial Curl-Ups and V Sit-and-Reac h Norms

    Age Partial V Sit-and- V Sit-and-

    Curl-Ups Reac h in Reach in

    Inches Inc hes

    (Girls) (Boys)

    9 15 2 1

    10 20 2 1

    11 20 2 1

    12 20 2 1

    13 25 3 1

    14 25 3 1

    15 30 3 1

    16 30 3 1

    17 30 3 1

    Appendix

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    Appendix

    9-18187 WA2-2002 Fitness CD Gr8 ADP 7-28-03 32

    Maximum and Target Hear t Rates by Age

    Age Maximum Heart Target Hear t Rate

    Rate * Range **

    9 211 127�169

    10 210 126�168

    11 209 125�167

    12 208 125�166

    13 207 124�166

    14 206 124�165

    15 205 123�164

    16 204 122�163

    17 203 122�162

    * The Maximum Heart Rate (MHR) is calculated by using the following formula:

    MHR ? 220 ? age

    ** The Ta rget Heart Rate Range (THR) is calculated by using the following formula:

    THR zone ? .60 ? MHR to .80 ? MHR

     

     

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    9-18187

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