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What does a student learn in ?

This is the year bodies learn what they can do. Students run, jump, hop, skip, gallop, and balance, and they practice rolling, tossing, and catching a ball. They share space with classmates, take turns, and follow simple directions during active play. By spring, they can move safely around a room full of other kids and play a basic group game without bumping into people or giving up.

  • Running and jumping
  • Throwing and catching
  • Balance
  • Taking turns
  • Active play
Source: New Jersey New Jersey Student Learning Standards
Year at a glance
How the year usually goes. Every school and district set their own curriculum, so treat this as a guide, not official pacing.
  1. 1

    Moving safely together

    Students learn to move around the room without bumping into friends. They practice walking, stopping, and listening for directions during group games.

  2. 2

    Running, jumping, and balancing

    Students try out the big ways their bodies can move. They run, hop, skip, and balance on one foot, getting steadier and more confident each week.

  3. 3

    Throwing, catching, and kicking

    Students start using balls and beanbags. They practice tossing to a partner, catching with two hands, and kicking a ball toward a target.

  4. 4

    Playing and cooperating

    Students join simple group games that need taking turns and sharing equipment. They practice using kind words, following rules, and cheering on classmates.

  5. 5

    Healthy habits for life

    Students notice how their bodies feel after moving. They talk about why running, stretching, and playing outside help them feel strong and happy.

Mastery Learning Standards
The required skills a student should display by the end of Pre-Kindergarten.
Physical Education
  • Develop a variety of motor skills, including locomotor, non-locomotor

    Students practice moving their bodies in different ways: running, jumping, balancing, and tossing or catching objects. These early movement skills build the habits that keep kids active as they grow.

  • Apply knowledge related to movement, performance

    Students learn basic ideas about how their bodies move and stay healthy, then put those ideas to work during games and active play.

  • Develop social skills through movement, including respect for self and others…

    Students practice taking turns, sharing space, and working with classmates during movement activities. They learn to follow group rules and treat others with care.

  • Develop personal skills, identify personal benefits of movement

    Students practice basic movement skills like jumping, balancing, and throwing, then talk about how moving makes their body feel. The goal is to help them want to be active on their own.

Common Questions
  • What does Pre-K physical education actually look like?

    Most of the year is about moving in lots of different ways. Students practice running, jumping, hopping, skipping, balancing, throwing, catching, and kicking. They also learn how to share space safely, take turns, and listen for directions during games.

  • How can I help my child build these skills at home?

    Play is the practice. Toss a soft ball back and forth, set up a pillow obstacle course, dance to music, or play tag in the yard. Ten or fifteen minutes a day of active play does more than any drill.

  • My child seems clumsy compared to other kids. Should I be worried?

    Pre-K is when these skills are just starting to click, and kids develop on very different timelines. Keep giving chances to climb, run, throw, and balance. If something still feels off by the end of the year, mention it to the pediatrician.

  • What is a manipulative skill?

    It means using hands or feet to control an object. Think rolling a ball, catching a beanbag, kicking a soccer ball, or hitting a balloon with a paddle. These are the building blocks for almost every sport later on.

  • How should I sequence motor skills across the year?

    Start with locomotor skills like walking, running, and jumping in open space, then layer in balance and body control. Introduce manipulative skills like rolling and tossing once students can move safely around each other. Save catching and kicking moving objects for later in the year.

  • Which skills usually need the most reteaching?

    Catching and skipping are the two that take the longest to stick. Galloping often shows up before skipping, and many students need months of practice tracking a ball before they can catch one reliably. Plan to revisit both in short bursts all year.

  • How do I handle the social side of PE at this age?

    Treat sharing space, taking turns, and stopping on a signal as skills, not behavior expectations. Teach them directly with simple games, freeze signals, and partner activities. Expect to practice these routines for the first few weeks before any real game runs smoothly.

  • How do I know if a student is ready for Kindergarten PE?

    By spring, look for steady running with changes of direction, jumping with two feet, balancing on one foot for a few seconds, and rolling or tossing a ball toward a target. Students should also follow a two-step direction and play a simple group game without melting down.

  • Does screen time really matter for this?

    Yes, because every hour on a screen is an hour not spent moving. Aim for at least an hour of active play a day, broken into chunks. Walks, park trips, and backyard games all count.