Moving with control
Students sharpen the basics of running, skipping, jumping, and balancing. The focus is steady form and safe spacing, so students can move around a gym or field without bumping into others.
This is the year movement skills start to look like real games and sports. Students combine running, jumping, throwing, and catching into smoother patterns and use them in team activities with rules. They learn what warming up, getting their heart rate up, and cooling down actually do for the body. By spring, students can play a group game fairly, follow the rules, and explain one habit that keeps them healthy.
Students sharpen the basics of running, skipping, jumping, and balancing. The focus is steady form and safe spacing, so students can move around a gym or field without bumping into others.
Students practice handling balls and equipment with more accuracy. Parents may notice better aim when tossing, catching, dribbling, or hitting a ball with a hand, foot, or paddle.
Students move into small group games and partner activities. They practice taking turns, following rules, encouraging teammates, and handling wins and losses without making the game harder for others.
Students learn how exercise affects the body, from a faster heartbeat to stronger muscles. They try activities that build endurance and flexibility, and start to notice which kinds of movement they enjoy.
Students set simple goals and talk about how movement fits into daily life outside school. The aim is for students to leave the year with a few activities they actually want to keep doing.
Students practice moving in different ways, such as running, balancing, and throwing or catching a ball. Building these skills gives students more ways to stay active as they grow.
Students use what they know about how the body moves and stays healthy to make smarter choices during games, exercises, and physical activities.
Students practice working with classmates during gym activities, taking turns, listening, and handling wins and losses without making it a problem for others.
Students name activities they enjoy and explain why moving regularly makes them feel better. They start building habits around physical activity that can last well beyond fourth grade.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Develop a variety of motor skills, including locomotor, non-locomotor | Students practice moving in different ways, such as running, balancing, and throwing or catching a ball. Building these skills gives students more ways to stay active as they grow. | PA-PE.1.4 |
| Apply knowledge related to movement, performance | Students use what they know about how the body moves and stays healthy to make smarter choices during games, exercises, and physical activities. | PA-PE.2.4 |
| Develop social skills through movement, including respect for self and others… | Students practice working with classmates during gym activities, taking turns, listening, and handling wins and losses without making it a problem for others. | PA-PE.3.4 |
| Develop personal skills, identify personal benefits of movement | Students name activities they enjoy and explain why moving regularly makes them feel better. They start building habits around physical activity that can last well beyond fourth grade. | PA-PE.4.4 |
Students keep building basic movement skills like running, jumping, skipping, throwing, catching, kicking, and striking. They use those skills in games and dance, learn simple fitness ideas, and practice working with a partner or small group.
Aim for about an hour of active play most days. A walk after dinner, a game of catch in the yard, bike riding, or jumping rope all count. The goal is steady movement, not athletic training.
Students should throw and catch with control, dribble a ball with hand or foot while moving, and jump rope for a stretch of time. They should also be able to explain why warming up, drinking water, and moving every day matter.
Start with the five parts of fitness and what each one feels like in the body. Build in regular pulse checks and short fitness stations. By spring, students should connect specific activities to the part of fitness they build.
Catching with soft hands, striking with a paddle or bat, and overhand throwing form tend to need extra practice. Many students also need repeated work on pacing themselves during longer runs and on stopping safely in open space.
Focus on the skill, not the score. Spend a few minutes playing catch, kicking a ball back and forth, or dancing in the kitchen. Steady practice in low-pressure settings builds confidence faster than organized games.
Plan small-group activities that require talking, sharing equipment, and taking turns leading. Set clear expectations for safe play and kind words, then name those behaviors out loud when students show them. Cooperative games before competitive ones helps the habits stick.
They can combine skills in a game, like dribble and pass or run and catch. They follow rules, play fairly with classmates, and can describe one or two reasons regular activity is good for the body and mind.