Moving and warming up together
Students start the year practicing how to move safely in a shared space. They run, skip, hop, and stop on a signal while learning class routines and how to be a good partner during games.
This is the year movement skills start to combine. Students dribble while moving, throw to a partner who is running, and string together skips, jumps, and turns in a game. They learn the why behind warming up, why a heart beats faster during tag, and how to take turns when a team is losing. By spring, students can play a simple group game with rules and keep their cool when it does not go their way.
Students start the year practicing how to move safely in a shared space. They run, skip, hop, and stop on a signal while learning class routines and how to be a good partner during games.
Students work on the basic skills used in most sports and recess games. They practice tossing and catching with a partner, dribbling a ball, and kicking toward a target with more control than last year.
Students learn what their body does during exercise. They notice a faster heartbeat, try activities that build strength and stamina, and start to connect daily movement with feeling healthy.
Students play small-sided games where the skills come together. They take turns, cheer for teammates, settle disagreements without an adult stepping in, and follow the rules even when their team is losing.
Students reflect on which activities they enjoy and why moving feels good. They set a small personal goal, try new games, and start to see physical activity as something they choose, not just something at school.
Students practice moving in different ways: running, jumping, throwing, catching, and balancing. These skills build the physical foundation kids need to stay active in sports and play throughout their lives.
Students use what they know about how their body moves and stays healthy to make better choices during exercise and games.
Students practice working with classmates during physical activities, taking turns, listening, and treating others with respect. Group games are where these habits get built.
Students practice movement skills and start figuring out which activities they enjoy. The goal is to build habits that keep them active not just in gym class, but for life.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Develop a variety of motor skills, including locomotor, non-locomotor | Students practice moving in different ways: running, jumping, throwing, catching, and balancing. These skills build the physical foundation kids need to stay active in sports and play throughout their lives. | VT-PE.1.3 |
| Apply knowledge related to movement, performance | Students use what they know about how their body moves and stays healthy to make better choices during exercise and games. | VT-PE.2.3 |
| Develop social skills through movement, including respect for self and others… | Students practice working with classmates during physical activities, taking turns, listening, and treating others with respect. Group games are where these habits get built. | VT-PE.3.3 |
| Develop personal skills, identify personal benefits of movement | Students practice movement skills and start figuring out which activities they enjoy. The goal is to build habits that keep them active not just in gym class, but for life. | VT-PE.4.3 |
Students build basic movement skills like skipping, hopping, throwing, catching, kicking, and dribbling. They also learn simple games, cooperation with classmates, and why moving their body helps them stay healthy.
Aim for about an hour of active play most days. Toss a ball in the yard, ride bikes, jump rope, or put on music and dance. Short bursts count, and the goal is for students to enjoy moving, not to drill a sport.
Focus on one skill at a time, like catching a soft ball from a few feet away or balancing on one foot. Practice for five minutes and celebrate small wins. Confidence grows when students feel steady progress, not when adults compare them to other kids.
Start with locomotor skills like running, skipping, and galloping, then add balance and body control. Move into throwing, catching, kicking, and striking in the middle of the year. Finish with small-sided games that put those skills together.
Catching with hands away from the body, throwing with opposition, and dribbling with control tend to lag. Build in short warm-up stations that revisit these every few weeks instead of teaching them once and moving on.
Students practice taking turns, sharing equipment, and including classmates in games. Partner and small-group tasks work better than full-class games for this age, because students get more reps and more chances to talk through disagreements.
No. The goal is comfort with general movement skills, not expertise in basketball or soccer. Students who can run, jump, throw, catch, and play fairly with others are right where they should be.
By spring, students should move through space safely, combine two skills like dribbling while walking, follow rules in simple games, and explain one reason exercise is good for them. Students who can do these things will keep up next year.