OSDE Fitness Assessment Information Guide PDF

Summary

This guide provides information about fitness assessments for students. It details the five components of physical fitness: cardiovascular endurance, muscular strength, muscular endurance, flexibility, and body composition. Methods for assessing and monitoring student fitness are included.

Full Transcript

Fitness Assessment Information Guide What are fitness assessments? Fitness assessments are a series of tests that measures and monitors students' physical fitness level. The series of tests assess the five components of physical fitness that make up total fitness: cardiovascular endurance, muscular...

Fitness Assessment Information Guide What are fitness assessments? Fitness assessments are a series of tests that measures and monitors students' physical fitness level. The series of tests assess the five components of physical fitness that make up total fitness: cardiovascular endurance, muscular strength, muscular endurance, flexibility, and body composition. Why do fitness testing? Fitness testing is an effective strategy to monitor and assess students’ fitness levels. It can also help students understand how healthy they are by learning about the five components of fitness and how to set goals to improve their health-related fitness. Who does fitness assessment? According to SHAPE America's Appropriate and Inappropriate Practices Related to Fitness Testing, students in grades 3 and below begin to learn form and protocols but not participate in fitness testing. Also, individuals respond differently, both physically and psychologically, to the same training protocols (Astorino & Schubert, 2014; Rankinen & Bouchard, 2011; Swift, et al., 2013). Therefore, fitness testing must be individualized to account for individual student differences and should never be used to evaluate teacher effectiveness or to grade students. How to do fitness assessments? There are video demonstrations of tests under each of the five components of fitness headings: Cardiovascular Endurance, Muscular Strength, Muscular Endurance, Flexibility and Body Composition. Now, take a closer look the components of fitness and watch the demonstration video for each test. A Closer Look: Cardiovascular Endurance Cardiovascular endurance is the ability of the heart and lungs to work together to provide the needed oxygen and fuel to the body during sustained workloads. Examples would be jogging, cycling and swimming. A multi-stage fitness test or a one-mile run are used most often to assess cardiovascular endurance. Cardiovascular Endurance Assessment Demonstration Video A Closer Look: Muscular Strength Muscular strength is the amount of force a muscle can produce. Examples would be the bench press, leg press or bicep curl. The push up test is most often used to assess muscular strength. Push Up Demonstration Video A Closer Look: Muscular Endurance Muscular endurance is the ability of the muscles to perform continuous without fatiguing. Examples would be cycling, step machines and elliptical machines. The sit up (aka curl up) test is most often used to test muscular endurance. Curl Up Demonstration Video A Closer Look: Flexibility Flexibility is the ability of each joint to move through the available range of motion for a specific joint. Examples would be stretching individual muscles or the ability to perform certain functional movements such as the lunge. The sit and reach test is most often used to test flexibility. Sit and Reach Demonstration Video Trunk Lift Demonstration Video A Closer Look: Body Composition Body composition is the amount of fat mass compared to lean muscle mass, bone and organs. This can be measured using student’s height and weight. According to SHAPE America's Appropriate and Inappropriate Practices Related to Fitness Testing position paper, assessing body composition is one of the most sensitive areas of fitness testing. Body composition is the amount of lean body mass compared to body fat. Body mass index (BMI) is a popular tool for screening students’ body composition because it is simple and non-invasive. It involves entering a student’s height and weight into a formula that calculates his or her BMI. It’s important to note that BMI, like the other test items, is not a tool for diagnosing health risk. In a school setting, calculating BMI is comparable to a vision screening. The vision screener conducts a simple vision test with each student and alerts parents of any warning signs and recommendation to follow up with the family’s eye care provider, when appropriate. The vision screener does not diagnose any eye-related conditions or prescribe eye glasses. Similarly, if a student’s BMI score signals a warning (too high or too low), the school informs the student’s family, with a suggestion to follow up with the family’s physician for further evaluation. BMI testing and measuring body composition is particularly sensitive in nature, so educators must take extra precaution when collecting that information. Educators must teach students why it’s important to measure body composition and must provide them with as much privacy as possible to help them feel safe and comfortable while their height and weight is being collected and recorded. Body Composition Demonstration Video Resource Links Cardivascular Endurance Assessment Individual Scorecard Fitness Assessment Recording Spreadsheet for Pre and Post Testing SHAPE America’s Appropriate and Inappropriate Practices Related to Fitness Testing SHAPE America’s Instructional Framework for Fitness Education In Physical Education

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