Goal Setting and Self-Assessment
Health, Fitness, and Goal Setting
Students learn to set SMART fitness and physical activity goals, develop personal activity plans, track progress, and build self-management and intrinsic motivation skills for lifelong physical health.
Learning Material
4 pagesWhat Is Goal Setting?
What Is Goal Setting?#
Goal setting is the process of identifying something you want to achieve and creating a plan to achieve it. In physical education, goal setting is one of the most powerful tools for improving fitness, developing skills, and building lifelong healthy habits.
Why Goal Setting Works#
Research in psychology and sports science consistently shows that people who set specific goals achieve more than those who simply try their best without a target. Goal setting works because:
1. Direction: A goal tells you where to aim. Without a goal, effort is unfocused. 2. Motivation: Progress toward a specific goal is visible and rewarding — which motivates continued effort. 3. Persistence: Goals help you push through difficulties because you can see the purpose of the effort. 4. Achievement: Reaching a goal produces genuine satisfaction and confidence — encouraging you to set new goals.
Types of Goals#
Outcome goals: Focus on the end result ('I want to win the race,' 'I want to score the most points').
- Problem: Outcomes are often influenced by factors outside your control (other players, luck)
Performance goals: Focus on personal improvement ('I want to run the mile in under 10 minutes,' 'I want to score 40 PACER laps').
- Better: Depends only on your own effort and improvement
Process goals: Focus on behaviors and habits ('I will exercise for 30 minutes every day,' 'I will stretch after every practice').
- Best for beginners: Fully within your control and directly create improvement
For Grade 4 students, process goals and performance goals are most valuable. Outcome goals are less useful at this stage because young athletes have less control over competitive outcomes.
Goal Setting in Real Life#
Goal setting is not just for PE — it is the foundation of achievement in all areas of life:
- Academic goals: 'I will study math for 20 minutes every day'
- Musical goals: 'I will practice piano 15 minutes per day until I can play this piece'
- Social goals: 'I will introduce myself to one new person each week'
The skills you practice in setting physical fitness goals transfer directly to every other area of your life.