Muscular Strength/Endurance

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Transcript Muscular Strength/Endurance

Chapter 6:
Muscular Strength & Endurance
Muscular Strength and
Endurance Defined
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Muscular strength
 The ability of a muscle or muscle groups to exert maximal
force against a resistance one time through the full ROM
 One repetition maximum (1RM)
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Muscular endurance
 The ability of a muscle or muscle group to exert sub-maximal
force repeatedly over a period of time
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We often use muscular endurance to predict
muscular strength
 Isometric (no movement)
 Isokinetic (same speed) or Isotonic (same resistance)
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Benefits of Strength Training
Health-Related Benefits
 Prevention of CVD
 Reduction and control of
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obesity & hypertension*
Improved self-confidence &
self-image
Development of good posture
Improved body comp*
Improved flexibility
Establishment of lifetime
interest in fitness*
Increased MS/ME/power
Aerobic benefit w/ circuits^
Skill-Related Benefits
– Improved ability to perform
basic motor skills
– Possible prevention of
injuries
– Greater ease & efficiency of
sport skill performance
– Early development of
coordination & balance
– Better performance on
nationwide fitness tests
*Post-pubescent-specific
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Myths About Muscular
Strength and Endurance
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Protein
Women and lifting
Spot training
The weight loss
balance
Body building vs.
weight training
Size ≠ Strength
Supplementation
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Major Muscles in The Human Body
How the Muscles Work
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Muscular contraction (pull only, no push):
 -cock-connect-pull-release (cross-bridge cycling)
http://www.sci.sdsu.edu/movies/actin_myosin_gif.html
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Principles of Weight Training
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Overload
 Doing more than you are used to
Progression
 Gradually increasing overload (frequency, intensity, time or some
combination)
Specificity
 Choose activities that target desired systems
Regularity
 “Use it or lose it”
Individuality
 Start at your base fitness level, using your own goals and keep your
genetics in mind
FITT guidelines
○ Frequency (how often)
○ Intensity (how hard)
○ Time (how long)
○ Type (mode)
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FITT Guidelines Applied to Muscular
Fitness Table 6.1
AGES
9-11 YEARS
12-14 YEARS
15-16 YEARS
17+ YEARS
FREQUENCY
2 -3 days / week
2 -3 days / week
2 -3 days / week
2+ days / week
INTENSITY
Very light weight
Or body weight
Light Weight
Moderate Weight
Light to heavy weight
(based on type
selected)
TIME
At least 1 set
(may do 2 sets)
At least 1 set
(may do 3 sets)
At least 1 set
(may do 3 or 4 sets)
Min. 1 set
6-15 reps
6-15 reps
6 – 15 reps
20-30 minutes
20-30 minutes
20-30 minutes
8-12 reps
(based on type
selected)
Major Muscle groups
Major Muscle groups
Major Muscle groups
Major muscle groups
1 exercise per
muscle or muscle
group
1 exercise per
muscle or muscle
group
2 exercises per
muscle or muscle
group
8 – 10 exercises
TYPE
select muscular
strength, power or
endurance
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Professional Guidelines &
Recommendations (p. 103)
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Professional position statements on youth strength training
(ACSM, 2008; NSCA, 2008)
◦ Proper supervision & technique instruction are critical
◦ Focus on technique development & affective domain
◦ Emphasize a variety of activities & skill development
◦ Focus on full ROM, enjoyment, fun
◦ Avoid the use of maximal lifts with children & adolescents
◦ Sample training protocol:
 Initial focus on lifting technique
 High reps & light weight
 1 set, 10-15 reps, 2x/wk (nonconsecutive days)
 8-10 different exercises
 Gradually increase load to 1-3 sets, 6-15 reps, 2-3 d/wk
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Estimating 1RM
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Safety
◦ Lifting 1RM should ABSOLUTELY NOT be used to obtain training intensity
◦ Do NOT expose children to:
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Loads >70-80% estimated 1RM
Explosive lifts with free weights
Calculate 1RM
 6-12 rep weight
 10 RM conversion (p. 102)
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Basic Structure of
Resistance Training Session
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Dynamic, whole-body warm up
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Not many static stretches
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Total body or isolated resistance training
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Cool down
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Lots of static stretches
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Exercise Safety Guidelines
 Train all major muscle groups
 Large  small
 Opposing muscle groups
 Strengthen the core
 Never lift alone
 Warm-up & cool-down properly
 Control speed (2-1-4 second count)
 Use the full range of motion
 Avoid breath-holding
 Pay attention to pain and excessive fatigue
Strength Training Programs
Can Include
 Body weight exercise
 Stability exercise balls
 Resistance bands
 Medicine balls
 Strength training exercises
 Core strength training
 Pilates exercise system
 Plyometrics
 Dietary guidelines
Resistance Training for
Elementary Students
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It is NOT developmentally appropriate to lift heavy
weights
○ Body weight training
○ Partner resistance training
○ Resistance bands
○ Medicine balls , stability balls
○ Light weight / High reps
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Things to Remember
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Use training principles
 Progression, Overload, Specificity, Individuality,
Regularity, FITT guidelines
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Benefits
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How muscles work
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Structure of each type of workout
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Safety guidelines and myths
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