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Summary AQA PE paper 2

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This document has all the notes required by AQA's mark scheme. Precise summaries that take a short amount of time to remember making it easy for revision.

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  • June 29, 2023
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  • 2022/2023
  • Summary
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PAPER 2 PE

Diet and nutrition


Carbohydrates

 Simple carbs- quickly digested such as fruits
 Complex carbs- longer to digest such as bread and pasta

Exercise related function
 Main fuel for high intensity aerobic activity
 Main fuel for 20 mins of aerobic
 3-4 hours before exercise complex carbs should be ate whereas 1-2 for simple

Fats
 saturated= single bond
 Unsaturated= at least double bond
 Trans fats increase cholesterol
Exercise related function
 Low intensity exercise
 Secondary energy fuel for low intensity aerobic work
 Carrier for fat soluble vitamins (A,D,E)

Proteins
 Combination of chemicals called amino acids
Exercise related function
 Growth and repair of tissue
 Make enzymes, hormones, and haemoglobin
 Provide some energy when glycogen/fat stores are low

Vitamin
 Organic compounds needed in small quantities to sustain life
Exercise related function
 VIT D- strong bones
 VIT B complex- energy metabolism
 VIT B12- production of red blood cells
 VIT C- protect and maintain cells, bones, and cartilage
Mineral
 Dissolved by body as ions and called electrolytes
Exercise-related function
 Iron- helps form haemoglobin and enhance transport of o2, increasing stamina
 Sodium- regulation of fluid levels. Too much= increase acidity in the muscle cauing
pain and fatigue
 Calcium- facilitates nerve transmission and aids in muscle contractions
Fibre
 Found in wall of plant cells

,Exercise related function
 Slows down time body takes to break down food
 Slower sustained release of food
 Improves stamina

Water
 Volume of water lost depends on weather, duration, and intensity of exercise
Exercise related function
 Carries nutrients to cells in body and remove waste products
 Control temp
 Maintain optimal performance

Training methods

Principles of training

 Specificity- must be related to the sport such as energy systems and muscle groups
used
 Progressive overload- increasing intensity over time
 Frequency, intensity, time, type- increasing weight/time or how many times a week
you train to prevent muscles adapting to that situation
 Reversibility- loss of fitness reduced if steady progress made through training
 Recovery- sufficient recovery to allow body to adapt to PO. 3:1

Periodisation
 Continuous sequence of periodic cycles in the process of improving performance


 macrocycle- group of phases lasting year +
 Mesocycle- phase of macrocycle lasting 4-6
weeks
 Microcycle- balanced group of units lasting
a week
 Unit- single period of training


Mesocycles will involve training, competing peak and transition
 Tapering- limiting exercise before a big/competitive event
Why periodise
 Prepare for optimal improvement in performance
 Achieve climax in the season
 Split training into smaller blocks for motivation
 Prepare for competition



Warming up/ cooling down

, warming up should include
 Gradual pulse raiser
 Stretching- static/ dynamic
 Skill based practices
 Metal preparation

Benefits
 ROM increase
 Psychological preparation
 Injury prevention
 Increase body temperature
 Capillary dilation- increase blood supply
Cooling down
 Maintaining elevated breathing and HR
 Gradual reduction in intensity and stretching- static
Benefits
 Removal of waste products
 Prevent DOMS

Circuit training
 Covers range of activities and intensities, normally 8-10 exercises
 Can target Muscular endurance with bodyweight, free and fixed weights and by
modifying work and rest intervals

Advantages Disadvantages
Avoids tedium DOMS
Targets many muscles Space needed
Easy to set up Need specificity

Plyometric training
 Incorporates jumps, bounds, and hops for development of power
How it works
1. Eccentric or concentric muscle action takes place
2. Detected by muscle spindle and sends to CNS
3. Stretch reflex initiated to prevent overstretch
4. Resulting in more powerful concentric contraction of muscles
5. Conclusion: if CNS believes muscle is lengthening too quickly it will initiate stretch
reflex= power concentric contraction as performer jumps

Advantages Disadvantage
Mimics rate of contraction in sport= specific DOMS from eccentric forces
Develops explosive strength Injury risk
Cheap and practical Not good for max strength development

Impacts on anaerobic system

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