Muscular Strength/Endurance
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Transcript Muscular Strength/Endurance
Chapter 6:
Muscular Strength & Endurance
Muscular Strength and
Endurance Defined
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)
Muscular endurance
The ability of a muscle or muscle group to exert sub-maximal
force repeatedly over a period of time
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
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
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
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
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)
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
Safety
◦ Lifting 1RM should ABSOLUTELY NOT be used to obtain training intensity
◦ Do NOT expose children to:
◦
◦
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
Dynamic, whole-body warm up
-
Not many static stretches
Total body or isolated resistance training
Cool down
-
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
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
Use training principles
Progression, Overload, Specificity, Individuality,
Regularity, FITT guidelines
Benefits
How muscles work
Structure of each type of workout
Safety guidelines and myths
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