a.
Health
related component
According to Health Galaxy (2014) health
related physical fitness is defined as activity aimed to improve the overall
health and well being. The goal of health- related fitness is prevention of
disease or rehabilitation from disease as well as the development of a high
level of functional capacity for daily tasks. Health related physical fitness
is further divided into 5 parts. These 5 components of physical fitness are
describes below:
1. Cardio-respiratory endurance (cardio-respiratory fitness)
Cardio-respiratory endurance is the ability
of the body's circulatory and respiratory systems to supply fuel during
sustained physical activity. To improve your cardio-respiratory endurance, try
activities that keep your heart rate elevated at a safe level for a sustained
length of time such as walking, swimming, or bicycling. The activity you choose
does not have to be strenuous to improve your cardio-respiratory endurance.
Start slowly with an activity you enjoy, and gradually work up to a more
intense pace.
Exercise:
Cardiovascular exercises or aerobics -walking, running, biking, rowing,
treadmills.
Assessment: A Max VO2
test in the laboratory is the best measure of cardiovascular fitness. Field
tests like the mile run, the 1 mile run, the mile walk, various bicycle, step,
and treadmill tests are usually done.
2. Muscular strength
Muscular strength is the ability of the
muscle to exert force during an activity. The key to making your muscles
stronger is working them against resistance, whether that be from weights or gravity.
If you want to gain muscle strength, try exercises such as lifting weights or
rapidly taking the stairs.
Exercise: Weight
training exercises- push ups, pull ups, biceps curls, pectoral fly, leg
extensions, back extension, etc.
Assessment: Lab and field
tests are similar and involve the assessment of one repetition maximum. 1RM
tests are typically conducted on resistance machines. Strength can also be
assessed using dynamo meters.
3. Muscular endurance
Muscular endurance is the ability of the
muscle to continue to perform without fatigue. To improve your muscle
endurance, try cardio-respiratory activities such as walking, jogging,
bicycling, or dancing.
Exercise: Strength
training exercises such as running, jogging, cross-training on an elliptical
machine, etc.
Assessment: Each major
muscle group of the body is tested to check the endurance. Muscular endurance
can be measured isometrically (static contractions) or isotonically (dynamic
contractions).
4. Body composition
Body composition refers to the relative
amount of muscle, fat, bone, and other vital parts of the body. A person's
total body weight (what you see on the bathroom scale) may not change over
time. But the bathroom scale does not assess how much of that body weight is
fat and how much is lean mass (muscle, bone, tendons, and ligaments). Body
composition is important to consider for health and managing your weight!
Body composition is the component which
considers the individual body type, according to the height, weight, frame size
and the ratio of the fat mass to lean muscle mass.
5. Flexibility
Flexibility is the range of motion around a
joint. flexibility in the joints can help prevent injuries through all stages
of life. If you want to improve your flexibility, try activities that lengthen
the muscles such as swimming or a basic stretching program.
Exercise: Flexibility
exercises- stretching, yoga, Tai Chi
Assessment: Flexibility
is measured in the lab using devices such as a goniometer, flexometer.
b.
Performance
related component
1. AGILITY -
It is a skill-related component of physical
fitness. Agility relates to the ability of a person to rapidly change the
position or directions of the entire body in space with speed and accuracy.
Being agile is all about being able to change
your direction and the speed at which you are travelling, quickly and
efficiently. This is common in sports such as football and rugby where the
player with the ball dodges a defender, or in badminton or tennis, moving
around the court quickly to reach the shuttlecock/ball in time.
Assessment: Agility is
typically measured using a shuttle zigzag run. Tests of agility are common as
screening tests among sports teams.
2. BALANCE -
Balance is the ability of a person to control
human body or to maintain equilibrium while stationary or moving (static and
dynamic conditions). E.g. hand stand, skating, skiing, catching a fly in
baseball, etc
Balance is the ability to maintain
equilibrium whilst stationary, or moving. Balance whilst moving is often called
dynamic balance. Balance is important in all kinds of sporting situations, most
noteably in gymnastics and ballet but also contact sports where having good
balance may prevent you being tackled to the floor! Balance is linked to
agility, as in order to quickly and efficently change direction you must be
balanced.
Assessment: Balance is
typically measured using a balance beam or tests that require holding a
stationary posture after changing body positions. Balance is generally
considered to be of two types- static and dynamic.
3. COORDINATION
-
Coordination relates to the ability of the
person to use the senses, such as sight and hearing, together with body parts
in performing motor tasks smoothly and accurately.
Coordination is the ability to use the body
parts and senses together to produce smooth efficient movements. We have all
seen someone who is uncoordinated, their movement looks awkward and shaky.
Being co-ordinated is vital in all sports, for example hand-eye coordination in
racket sports and the co-ordination to use the opposite arm and leg when
sprinting.
Assessment: It is
typically assessed using measures of hand-eye or foot-eye coordination such as
juggling, dribbling a ball or hitting an object. There are different types of
coordination which require different tests for assessment.
4. POWER -
Power is a skill-related component of
physical fitness that relates to the ability to the rate at which one can
perform work. Power is considered to be a combination of strength and speed. It
has also been defined as the ability to exert muscle force quickly. For this
reason some consider it to be a combination of skill and health-related
physical fitness. It is the ability of muscle to release maximum force in the
shortest period of time.
Power = Force X Speed
Speed and force must be combined for
effective performance in activities like baseball throw, jumps for height,
football kick, boxing punch etc.
Power is the product of strength and speed.
When we perform a task as quickly and as forcefully as we can, the result is
powerful. For example, a sprint start, a shot-put or javelin throw or
long-jump.
Assessment: Examples of
power include putting the shot and vertical jumping. There are, however, many
different types of power and total assessment would require many different
tests.
5. SPEED -
Most sports and activities require some form
of speed. Even long distance running often requires a burst of speed to finish
the race ahead of your competitors. Speed is defined as the ability to move a
body part quickly. Speed is not always about how quickly you can move your
whole body from A to B. It also relates to body parts. For example, when
playing golf, the speed of your arms and upper body in creating the swing are
vital in driving the ball over a long distance.
Speed is the ability of a person to execute
motor movements with high speed in the shortest period of time. It is equal to
the distance covered per unit of time. Speed is an integral part of every sport
and can be expressed as - maximum speed, elastic strength (power) and speed endurance.
Speed is influenced by the athlete's mobility, special strength, strength
endurance and technique. There are many different types of speed such as
running speed, swimming speed, speed of hand or foot movement, etc.
The element of speed is involved in most of
the athletic skills such as in sprint running, some skills of soccer,
basketball, etc.
Assessment: Among
athletes a 40 yard dash is often used to measure speed. There are a wide
variety of laboratory measures of speed that are highly specific to different
body parts and different human movement activities.
6. REACTION
TIME -
A skill-related component of physical fitness
that relates to the time elapsed between stimulation and the beginning of the
reaction to it. Total response time includes stimulus to beginning of movement
(reaction time) to end of movement (movement time). Like speed, reaction time
is also greatly influenced by heredity.
Reaction time is how quickly your brain can
respond to a stimulus and initiate a response. This is important in most
sports. The most obvious being responding to the gun at the start of a race,
but also a goalkeeper saving a penalty, or a badminton player reacting to a
smash shot. The examples in sport are endless.
Assessment: There are
many different types of reaction time and total assessment of reaction time
would require many different tests. Sophisticated timing devices are used to
measure total response time in the lab.
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