Fitness Components and Assessment
Health, Fitness, and Goal Setting
Students learn the five health-related fitness components, participate in age-appropriate fitness assessments, and begin keeping a personal fitness journal to track progress and reflect on their physical health.
Learning Material
4 pagesThe Five Components of Health-Related Fitness
The Five Components of Health-Related Fitness#
Physical fitness is not just one thing — it is a combination of several different qualities that together determine overall physical health and capability. Scientists have identified five health-related fitness components that are directly linked to good health outcomes.
1. Cardiovascular Endurance#
Cardiovascular endurance (also called cardiorespiratory endurance) is the ability of the heart, lungs, and blood vessels to deliver oxygen to working muscles during sustained physical activity.
- Activities that develop it: Running, swimming, cycling, jump rope, soccer, basketball — any activity that keeps the heart rate elevated for several minutes
- Why it matters: Strong cardiovascular endurance reduces the risk of heart disease, stroke, type 2 diabetes, and many other chronic diseases
- Assessment: The Progressive Aerobic Cardiovascular Endurance Run (PACER test), or a timed 1-mile run
2. Muscular Strength#
Muscular strength is the maximum amount of force a muscle or muscle group can produce in a single effort.
- Activities that develop it: Push-ups, pull-ups, lifting weights, gymnastics
- Why it matters: Strength supports daily activities, protects joints, improves posture, and prevents injury
- Assessment: Maximum push-ups or flexed arm hang (hanging from a bar)
3. Muscular Endurance#
Muscular endurance is the ability of a muscle or muscle group to repeatedly exert force over an extended period of time.
- Different from strength: Strength = maximum single effort; Endurance = many repetitions over time
- Activities that develop it: Sit-ups, push-ups (many repetitions), plank holds, rowing
- Assessment: Curl-ups (modified sit-ups) counted in a timed period
4. Flexibility#
Flexibility is the range of motion available at a joint and its surrounding muscles.
- Activities that develop it: Stretching, yoga, gymnastics, dance
- Assessment: The sit-and-reach test (measuring how far forward you can reach from a seated position)
5. Body Composition#
Body composition refers to the proportions of fat mass and lean mass (muscle, bone, organs) in the body.
- Healthy body composition: An appropriate ratio of lean mass to body fat for age and sex
- Important note: Body composition is influenced by genetics, growth, and many factors. It is discussed in terms of health, never appearance. All body types are respected in PE.