Moving with skill and control
Students sharpen the basics of moving well: running, jumping, throwing, catching, and dodging. Parents may notice steadier coordination in pickup games at home and more confidence trying new activities.
Sixth grade is when gym class starts feeling like training for a real sport or activity. Students move past basic skills and learn to use them in games, fitness routines, and team play. They start tracking their own fitness and figuring out which activities they actually enjoy. By spring, students can warm up on their own, play fairly with a group, and explain why they picked a certain activity to stay active.
Students sharpen the basics of moving well: running, jumping, throwing, catching, and dodging. Parents may notice steadier coordination in pickup games at home and more confidence trying new activities.
Students work on cooperating, communicating, and handling wins and losses without drama. Expect more talk at home about respecting teammates, listening to a coach, and helping a friend who is struggling.
Students learn what warming up, stretching, and getting their heart rate up actually do for the body. They start to explain why certain games build strength, stamina, or quick thinking.
Students set small fitness goals, track their own progress, and pick activities they enjoy outside of school. Parents may hear more about walks, bike rides, or sports students want to try on their own.
Students practice moving in different ways, like running, balancing, and throwing or catching, to build the physical skills they'll use in sports, games, and everyday activity.
Students use what they know about how the body moves and stays fit to make smarter choices during physical activities. That means adjusting effort, form, or pacing based on what the activity demands.
Students practice working with classmates during physical activities: listening, taking turns, and handling wins or losses with good sportsmanship. The focus is on how students treat themselves and others, not just how well they move.
Students practice setting fitness goals, name what regular exercise does for their body and mood, and make choices about staying active. The focus is on habits that hold up past school, not just skills for gym class.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Develop a variety of motor skills, including locomotor, non-locomotor | Students practice moving in different ways, like running, balancing, and throwing or catching, to build the physical skills they'll use in sports, games, and everyday activity. | VT-PE.1.6 |
| Apply knowledge related to movement, performance | Students use what they know about how the body moves and stays fit to make smarter choices during physical activities. That means adjusting effort, form, or pacing based on what the activity demands. | VT-PE.2.6 |
| Develop social skills through movement, including respect for self and others… | Students practice working with classmates during physical activities: listening, taking turns, and handling wins or losses with good sportsmanship. The focus is on how students treat themselves and others, not just how well they move. | VT-PE.3.6 |
| Develop personal skills, identify personal benefits of movement | Students practice setting fitness goals, name what regular exercise does for their body and mood, and make choices about staying active. The focus is on habits that hold up past school, not just skills for gym class. | VT-PE.4.6 |
Students work on running, jumping, throwing, catching, dribbling, and striking in a mix of games, fitness activities, and team sports. They also learn how warm-ups, heart rate, and practice connect to staying healthy. Expect a steady rotation between skill-building units and games that put those skills to use.
Aim for about an hour of movement most days. A walk after dinner, shooting hoops in the driveway, biking, or playing catch in the yard all count. The goal is regular activity, not athletic performance.
Students should move with control in a variety of games, throw and catch with accuracy, and keep a steady pace during fitness activities. They should also explain why warm-ups matter and set a simple personal fitness goal.
Start with the basics of heart rate, warm-up, and cool-down inside familiar activities. Add muscular strength, endurance, and flexibility in the middle of the year, then have students track a personal fitness goal in the spring. Tie every concept back to an activity students are already doing.
Sixth grade is a big jump in coordination, and most students feel awkward at times. Focus on activities where progress is easy to see, like jumping rope, juggling, biking, or shooting baskets. Short, regular practice builds confidence faster than long sessions.
Catching while moving, defensive footwork, and pacing during longer runs tend to need extra cycles. Cooperation skills also need direct teaching at this age, especially handling disagreements during games and including teammates who are still learning a skill.
Use short, specific look-fors during games and group tasks, such as passing to every teammate, following safety rules, and resolving a disagreement without an adult. Score these the same way each unit so students know what good behavior looks like in PE.
Roughly 60 minutes of moderate or vigorous movement most days is the target. It does not have to be a sport. Walking the dog, raking leaves, dancing, or playing tag with younger siblings all add up.
A ready student can join a new game, pick up the rules quickly, and contribute on a team without constant coaching. They can also describe one personal reason they choose to be active and stick with a fitness routine for a few weeks.