Personal Fitness and Active Lifestyle

KS3

PE-KS4-D005

Engaging in activities that develop personal fitness and promote an active, healthy lifestyle

National Curriculum context

Personal fitness at KS4 encompasses pupils' understanding of health-related fitness, training principles and the physiological adaptations that result from systematic exercise. Pupils design, implement and evaluate personalised fitness programmes addressing components of fitness — cardiovascular endurance, muscular strength, flexibility, speed and body composition — appropriate to their chosen activities. The curriculum supports pupils in developing habits of regular physical activity and the knowledge to sustain an active lifestyle throughout adulthood, understanding the relationship between physical activity, mental health and long-term wellbeing.

4

Concepts

2

Clusters

3

Prerequisites

0

With difficulty levels

Specialist Teacher: 3
AI Facilitated: 1

Lesson Clusters

1

Develop personal fitness and understand components of a healthy active lifestyle

introduction Curated

Healthy Lifestyle Understanding (C017) provides the conceptual knowledge base — components of fitness, training principles, physiological benefits — that informs Personal Fitness Development (C015). Understanding must precede purposeful, self-directed fitness development.

2 concepts Systems and System Models
2

Apply fitness knowledge to promote an active lifestyle through diverse physical activities

practice Curated

Active Lifestyle Promotion (C016) and Physical Activity Diversity (C020) represent the applied dimension: actually making active lifestyle choices and engaging in a breadth of physical activities, translating health knowledge into sustained personal behaviour.

2 concepts Cause and Effect

Prerequisites

Concepts from other domains that pupils should know before this domain.

Domain Vocabulary

60 terms across 4 concepts (2 shared)

Academic (60)
Concept
T2

active commuting

Definition pending

T2

active lifestyle

Definition pending

T2

anxiety

Definition pending

T2

body composition

Definition pending

Shared by 2 concepts

T2

bone density

Definition pending

T2

breadth

Definition pending

T2

cardiovascular endurance

Definition pending

T2

cardiovascular system

Definition pending

T2

circuit training

Definition pending

T2

community facility

Definition pending

T2

continuous training

Definition pending

T2

cortisol

Definition pending

T2

cross-training

Definition pending

T2

depression

Definition pending

T2

diversity

Definition pending

T2

dose-response

Definition pending

T2

endorphins

Definition pending

T2

exploration

Definition pending

T2

fartlek

Definition pending

T2

fitness programme

Definition pending

T2

fitt principle

Definition pending

T2

flexibility

Definition pending

T2

gym membership

Definition pending

T2

habit formation

Definition pending

T2

healthy lifestyle

Definition pending

T2

hydration

Definition pending

T2

interest development

Definition pending

T2

interval training

Definition pending

T2

intrinsic enjoyment

Definition pending

T2

leisure

Definition pending

T2

lifelong participation

Definition pending

T2

lifestyle variety

Definition pending

T2

mental health

Definition pending

Shared by 2 concepts

T2

motivation

Definition pending

T2

multi-activity

Definition pending

T2

muscular endurance

Definition pending

T2

muscular strength

Definition pending

T2

musculoskeletal system

Definition pending

T2

new experience

Definition pending

T2

nutrition

Definition pending

T2

overload

Definition pending

T2

overuse injury

Definition pending

T2

physical literacy

Definition pending

T2

plyometrics

Definition pending

T2

progression

Definition pending

T2

recreation

Definition pending

T2

reversibility

Definition pending

T2

sampling

Definition pending

T2

sedentary behaviour

Definition pending

T2

self-direction

Definition pending

T2

self-esteem

Definition pending

T2

sleep

Definition pending

T2

social wellbeing

Definition pending

T2

specialisation

Definition pending

T2

sustainable activity

Definition pending

T2

taster session

Definition pending

T2

variety

Definition pending

T2

weight training

Definition pending

T2

well-rounded

Definition pending

T2

work-life balance

Definition pending

Concepts (4)

Personal Fitness Development

process Specialist Teacher

PE-KS4-C015

Developing and maintaining personal physical fitness

Teaching guidance

Teach pupils to design, implement and evaluate personal fitness programmes based on their individual needs and goals. Cover the components of health-related fitness: cardiovascular endurance, muscular strength, muscular endurance, flexibility, and body composition. Introduce training methods for each component: continuous training, interval training, Fartlek, circuit training, weight training, plyometrics, and flexibility methods (static, dynamic, PNF). Teach the FITT principle (Frequency, Intensity, Time, Type) and how to manipulate training variables to achieve specific adaptations. Use fitness testing (Cooper run, grip dynamometry, sit and reach, beep test) to establish baselines and measure progress. Develop pupils' ability to evaluate their programme's effectiveness and make evidence-based modifications.

Vocabulary (16 terms)
body composition
cardiovascular endurance new
circuit training new
continuous training new
fartlek new
fitness programme new
fitt principle
flexibility
interval training new
muscular endurance new
muscular strength new
overload
plyometrics new
progression
reversibility
weight training new
Common misconceptions

Pupils often believe that fitness development is simply about exercising more, not understanding the importance of training specificity, progressive overload and adequate recovery. Many think that one type of training (usually running) develops all fitness components, not recognising that different components require different training methods. Some pupils equate fitness with body appearance rather than functional capacity, which can lead to unhealthy attitudes. The myth that 'muscle turns to fat' when you stop training persists — in reality, muscle atrophies and fat may accumulate independently.

Delivery rationale

Physical Education process concept — requires physical space, expert technique correction, and safety supervision.

Active Lifestyle Promotion

attitude Specialist Teacher

PE-KS4-C016

Making choices that promote an active, healthy lifestyle

Teaching guidance

Help pupils develop practical strategies for maintaining an active lifestyle beyond school. Discuss the transition from structured school PE to self-directed adult physical activity and the challenges this presents. Map local facilities, clubs, classes and informal activity opportunities that pupils could access independently. Explore different models of active lifestyle: competitive sport, recreational activity, outdoor pursuits, active commuting, gym membership, home exercise, and group fitness classes. Address adult-specific barriers: work commitments, financial constraints, family responsibilities, and declining social networks for sport. Create long-term personal activity plans that extend beyond school, identifying realistic activities, facilities and schedules. Connect active lifestyle choices to mental health, social wellbeing and professional productivity.

Vocabulary (15 terms)
active commuting new
active lifestyle new
community facility new
gym membership new
habit formation new
intrinsic enjoyment
leisure
lifelong participation new
mental health
motivation
recreation
self-direction new
social wellbeing new
sustainable activity new
work-life balance new
Common misconceptions

Pupils often believe that PE lessons will be replaced by natural adult activity, not recognising that without deliberate planning, physical activity levels typically decline sharply after leaving school. Many think an active lifestyle requires significant time and money, when many effective activities (walking, bodyweight exercise, cycling, parkrun) are free or low-cost. Some pupils believe that they are either 'sporty people' or not, applying a fixed identity that limits their future participation choices.

Delivery rationale

Physical Education attitude concept — requires physical space, expert technique correction, and safety supervision.

Healthy Lifestyle Understanding

knowledge AI Facilitated

PE-KS4-C017

Understanding components and benefits of a healthy, active lifestyle

Teaching guidance

Develop comprehensive understanding of the relationship between physical activity, nutrition, sleep, mental health and overall wellbeing. Teach the physiology of exercise in accessible terms: how cardiovascular exercise strengthens the heart, how resistance training builds bone density, how physical activity releases endorphins and reduces cortisol. Introduce the concept of the exercise dose-response relationship: how much activity produces measurable health benefits. Cover sedentary behaviour as a distinct health risk, independent of exercise habits. Discuss the mental health benefits of physical activity: anxiety reduction, depression management, improved self-esteem and cognitive function. Address common health misinformation from social media around fitness, nutrition, supplements and body image. Use case studies and real data to make health concepts concrete and personally relevant.

Vocabulary (16 terms)
anxiety new
body composition
bone density
cardiovascular system new
cortisol new
depression new
dose-response new
endorphins new
healthy lifestyle new
hydration
mental health
musculoskeletal system new
nutrition
sedentary behaviour new
self-esteem new
sleep new
Common misconceptions

Pupils are frequently exposed to health misinformation via social media, including myths about extreme diets, fat-burning supplements, detox products, and body transformation timelines. Many believe that being thin equals being healthy, when health is determined by cardiovascular fitness, strength, flexibility, mental health and overall lifestyle rather than body weight alone. Some pupils think mental health benefits of exercise require intense physical effort, when research shows that even moderate activity such as walking has significant mental health benefits.

Delivery rationale

PE knowledge concept — factual content deliverable digitally but physical context benefits from facilitator.

Physical Activity Diversity

skill Specialist Teacher

PE-KS4-C020

Engaging in a range of different physical activities to develop breadth of experience

Teaching guidance

Encourage physical activity diversity by exposing pupils to activities they may not have experienced: rowing, fencing, climbing, mountain biking, yoga, pilates, martial arts, water polo or dance styles beyond the curriculum. Use taster day formats where pupils sample multiple activities in a single day. Develop pupils' understanding of why diverse physical activity is beneficial: different activities develop different fitness components, reduce overuse injury risk, maintain motivation through variety, and provide social opportunities in different contexts. Create challenge cards where pupils track how many different activities they have tried over a term or year. Connect activity diversity to the concept of physical literacy — a physically literate person can participate confidently in many different activities. Discuss how diverse experience at school opens up lifelong activity options.

Vocabulary (15 terms)
breadth
cross-training new
diversity new
exploration new
interest development new
lifestyle variety new
multi-activity
new experience new
overuse injury new
physical literacy
sampling new
specialisation new
taster session new
variety
well-rounded
Common misconceptions

Pupils often believe that trying many activities means they are not committed enough, when in fact broad participation at KS4 builds the physical literacy and enjoyment that sustains lifelong activity. Many think they must choose and specialise in one sport, not understanding that research supports multi-sport participation for long-term athletic development and enjoyment. Some pupils avoid new activities because they fear being a beginner, not recognising that being a beginner is a valuable learning experience that develops resilience and empathy.

Delivery rationale

Physical Education skill concept — requires physical space, expert technique correction, and safety supervision.