Strength, power, and conditioning principles for physical education. Covers the seven classical strength adaptations (hypertrophy, maximal strength, power, endurance, speed, agility, mobility), resistance training modalities, periodization models, age-appropriate progression, and injury prevention. Use when designing resistance units, prescribing off-season conditioning, adapting training for adolescent development, or integrating strength work into sport-specific preparation.
Strength is the foundation on which most athletic performance rests. A stronger athlete jumps higher, sprints faster, changes direction more cleanly, resists injury better, and recovers faster from training. Strength also governs aging: loss of muscle mass and power (sarcopenia) is one of the central determinants of late-life function, and habits of resistance training built in school carry forward for decades. This skill lays out the physiology, the programming, and the teaching progressions of strength and conditioning for physical education.
Agent affinity: wooden (practice discipline and progression), kenneth-cooper (integrated conditioning)
Concept IDs: pe-strength-adaptations, pe-periodization, pe-age-appropriate-resistance
Resistance training produces different adaptations depending on load, volume, tempo, and rest. The programmer chooses which adaptation is the target before choosing the exercise.
| Adaptation | Load | Reps | Sets | Rest | Primary mechanism |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Muscular endurance | 40--60% 1RM |
| 15--25 |
| 2--3 |
| 30--60 s |
| Capillary density, mitochondrial density |
| Hypertrophy | 65--85% 1RM | 6--12 | 3--5 | 60--90 s | Muscle fiber cross-section |
| Maximal strength | 85--100% 1RM | 1--5 | 3--6 | 2--5 min | Neural drive, motor unit recruitment |
| Power | 30--60% 1RM (explosive) | 3--6 | 3--5 | 2--3 min | Rate of force development |
| Speed | Bodyweight or light | 6--10 sec sprints | 4--8 | 2--3 min | Neural firing, stride mechanics |
| Agility | Bodyweight | 10--30 sec | 4--8 | 1--2 min | Decelerate-accelerate, change of direction |
| Mobility | Bodyweight, no load | Varied | 2--3 | 30 s | Range of motion, tissue quality |
1RM = one-rep maximum, the heaviest load an athlete can lift once with good form. Most school settings estimate 1RM from a multi-rep max rather than testing it directly.
Strength does not require a weight room. A PE teacher with no equipment can still build strength competently.
| Modality | Equipment | Best for | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bodyweight | None | Beginners, mass instruction, mobility | Hard to overload advanced learners |
| Free weights | Barbells, dumbbells | Maximal strength, power, sport transfer | Form complexity, safety, supervision |
| Machines | Weight stack machines | Isolated muscles, controlled movement | Limited transfer, fixed paths |
| Resistance bands | Elastic bands | Portability, variable resistance | Hard to quantify load |
| Medicine balls | Weighted balls | Rotational power, explosive throwing | Best as complement, not sole modality |
| Kettlebells | Cast-iron kettlebells | Power endurance, grip, posterior chain | Technique-heavy |
For a PE class without a dedicated weight room, bodyweight progressions plus a small set of bands and medicine balls covers 90% of what most learners need.
Youth resistance training has a long history of misinformation. The evidence is now clear: supervised resistance training is safe and beneficial for children and adolescents when the load, technique, and progression are appropriate. Three principles govern the age adjustment.
Principle 1 — Technique before load. Before a learner lifts any appreciable weight, they must execute the movement pattern flawlessly under bodyweight or an empty bar. This is not optional. Most youth lifting injuries happen because load preceded competence.
Principle 2 — Full range of motion, controlled tempo. Slow eccentrics, full depth, pause at the bottom. Young athletes often rush reps because they have the enthusiasm but not yet the body control. Slow tempo extracts more adaptation per rep and builds the body control they lack.
Principle 3 — Periodization, not year-round maxing out. Young athletes should have clear off-season, in-season, and transition phases. Off-season is when strength develops. In-season is when strength is maintained, not extended.
| Age | Appropriate focus |
|---|---|
| 6--10 | Fundamental movement skills, bodyweight games, no dedicated resistance work |
| 10--12 | Bodyweight progressions, light medicine ball, technique with empty bar |
| 12--14 | Supervised resistance training with light-to-moderate loads, hypertrophy and technique emphasis |
| 14--16 | Full periodized programming, maximal strength introduced under close supervision |
| 16+ | Advanced programming, sport-specific preparation, power and speed emphasis |
Periodization is the deliberate organization of training across a timeframe to peak performance at the right moment and avoid overtraining. Three classical models.
Over a macrocycle (typically 12--16 weeks), progressively increase intensity and decrease volume. Start with high-volume hypertrophy work, transition to maximal strength, finish with power and peaking.
| Phase | Weeks | Load | Reps | Sets | Focus |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hypertrophy | 1--4 | 65--75% | 8--12 | 3--4 | Muscle mass |
| Strength | 5--8 | 80--90% | 3--6 | 4--5 | Max strength |
| Power | 9--12 | 50--70% | 3--5 | 3--4 | Rate of force |
| Peak | 13--14 | 85--95% | 1--3 | 3--4 | Competition-ready |
Vary intensity and volume within a single week rather than across blocks. Monday = hypertrophy, Wednesday = maximal strength, Friday = power. Better for athletes who need multiple qualities simultaneously (most team sports).
Short, concentrated blocks of 2--4 weeks each focused on a single adaptation. Accumulation (volume), transmutation (sport-specific), realization (peak). Used in high-level track and weightlifting where peak must align with specific dates.
For school PE, a simplified linear model is usually enough: 4 weeks base, 4 weeks strength, 2 weeks peaking and retest. Undulating and block models belong in advanced varsity programs.
Starting profile. 16-year-old guard, 1RM squat 120 kg (estimated), 1RM bench 70 kg (estimated), vertical jump 55 cm. Goal: add 5 cm to vertical, maintain or add lean mass, return to season stronger and injury-resistant.
Weeks 1--4 — Hypertrophy base.
Weeks 5--8 — Strength emphasis.
Weeks 9--10 — Power and peak.
Retest. Vertical jump, estimated 1RM on main lifts, body composition. Expected result: +4--6 cm vertical, 5--10% improvement in maximal strength, 1--2 kg lean mass added.
Situation. 30 9th-graders, one PE teacher, no barbells, no machines. Just gym floor, a box of resistance bands, 4 medicine balls, pull-up bar. Eight-week strength unit.
Week 1 — Movement pattern assessment. Seven fundamental patterns: squat, hinge, push, pull, lunge, rotation, carry. Each student demonstrates bodyweight versions. Teacher scores each pattern 1--3.
Week 2--3 — Technique progression.
Week 4--5 — Volume progression.
Week 6--7 — Strength challenge.
Week 8 — Retest.
Result across the class: 3-point pattern quality improvement on average, 40--60% increase in max bodyweight reps, measurable vertical jump gains. Zero equipment required that the school did not already own.
Plyometrics — stretch-shortening cycle exercises — build explosive power by training the fast elastic properties of muscle and tendon. They should be introduced only after a technique base is in place.
Low-intensity plyometrics (any age with competence): jump rope, rhythmic hops, ankle bounces, medicine ball chest pass.
Moderate plyometrics (14+): broad jump, tuck jump, box jump, medicine ball slam.
Advanced plyometrics (16+ with strength base): depth jump, depth drop, bounding, weighted jumps.
Volume rule. Plyometric volume is measured in ground contacts per session. Beginner 60--100, intermediate 100--150, advanced 150--250. Never combine maximum plyometric volume with maximum strength loading in the same session.
| Query signal | Route to |
|---|---|
| "Design a strength program" | wooden (structure) + kenneth-cooper (energy systems integration) |
| "Is this safe for middle schoolers?" | naismith (developmental context) + wooden |
| "Off-season plan for sport X" | wooden (periodization) |
| "My athlete is overtrained" | kenneth-cooper (recovery) + wooden |
| "How do I teach the squat?" | wooden (progressive teaching) |
| "What's the minimum effective dose?" | kenneth-cooper |
Strength training is not inherently dangerous. Injuries come from specific, preventable errors.
| Error | Mechanism | Prevention |
|---|---|---|
| Load before technique | Compensation patterns break down under load | Master bodyweight pattern first |
| Progression too fast | Tissues adapt slower than neural drive | 10% load progression per week maximum |
| Skipping warm-up | Cold tissue injures easier | 10-minute progressive warm-up every session |
| Unilateral imbalances | Stronger side dominates, weaker side hides | Single-limb variations in every program |
| Ego lifting | Maximum attempts with poor form | Technique standards are non-negotiable |
| Ignoring recovery | Chronic fatigue, overuse injury | Periodized rest and deload weeks |