Fitness Training Terms
Skill Related Fitness
Six components: agility, balance, coordination, power, reaction time and speed, all related to athletic performance.
Progression Principle
A gradual increase in one if the FITT variables to create an overload once the person's fitness level increases.
Specificity Principle
A workout must be specific to the component of fitness you are trying to improve.
Type
Activity you performed.
Health Related Fitness
Five components that measured your general health and can be achieved without being "athletic." Cardio respiratory endurance, muscle strength and endurance, flexibility and body composition.
Intensity
How hard you work out.
Time (Duration)
How long you work at a given activity (minutes or repetitions)
Frequency
How often you perform a workout or exercise.
Overload Principle
Placing a greater-than-normal stress on the body's systems you are trying to train. Increase the intensity of one of the FITT variables to produce the overload.
Muscle Strength
The ability of a muscle or muscles to push or pull a given weight, produce a force, or resist a force regardless of time. The maximum amount of force a muscle can produce one time.
Cardiorespiratory Endurance
The ability of the heart, blood, blood vessels and lungs to supply oxygen to the muscles during long periods of physical activity.
Muscle Endurance
The ability of the muscles to repeat a movement many times or hold a position without stopping to rest.
Flexibility
The ability to move a joint through a full range of motion.
Body Composition
The combination of fat mass and fat-free mass, including fat, bones, muscles, organs, and water.
FITT
The variables of frequency, intensity, time and type.