Paper 2 (pt 1) Flashcards

1
Q

SMART principle
In the smart principle, what does each letter stand for and what does it mean?

A

Specific - focuses or linked to a sport
Measurable - be able to measure if you have achieved it
Achievable - be realistic and with the performers capability
Recorded - measurements should be logged and tracked
Timed - have a time limit to the goal

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2
Q

Skilful Movement

A

fluent
efficient
predetermined
aesthetic
co-ordinated

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3
Q

Skilful Movement Explanations 1

A

efficient - not wasting time or energy e.g. a swimmer using the perfect freestyle technique without wasting energy or time

fluent - skill is performed in one flowing movement e.g. a gymnast performing a cartwheel and backward walkover without stopping

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4
Q

Skilful movement explanations 2

A

predetermined - a skill has a clear objective or goal e.g. a dancer knows the dance routine before starting

aesthetic - a skill that looks good or pleasing to the eye e.g. a high board diver performing a double summersault to look good

co-ordinated - performed with control using limbs, senses and movements at the same time e.g. a tennis serve involves a throw, jump and hit at the same time

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5
Q

Feedback

A

intrinsic
extrinsic
knowledge of performance
knowledge of results
positive
negative

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6
Q

Extrinsic feedback

A

comes from external sources such as sound or vision

example: a netballer sees the ball go into the net and knows they have been successful

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7
Q

Knowledge of performance feedback

A

feedback about how well a skill or movement is executed

example: a coach in football telling their player that their shooting technique is incorrect

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8
Q

Knowledge of results feedback

A

feedback about the end result

Example: a coach in football telling their player that their shooting technique is incorrect

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9
Q

Positive feedback

A

gives information about successful outcomes

Example: a rugby coach praising a footballer for a good pass

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10
Q

Negative feedback

A

gives information about unsuccessful outcomes

Example: a tennis coach telling their player that their grip is incorrect

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11
Q

PEDs - impact on sport

A

clean athletes have their records questioned
creates bad publicity for the sport
creates a bad name for countries
drugs testing is expensive to carry out

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12
Q

PEDs - impact on performers

A

can receive bans and fines
stripped of medals and titles
lose sponsorship deals
become a bad role model

example - Lance Armstrong (cyclist)

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13
Q

Reasons for using PEDs

A

to improve physical function (strength or weight loss)
to improve psychological function (alertness or calm)
to win at all costs
the belief that others are doing it
the belief that they can get away with it

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14
Q

Why goal setting is important

A

adhere to exercise - can push people to stick with their exercise programme

motivate people - inspire or drive people to achieve their potential

optimise or improve performance - can lead to a higher level of performance

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15
Q

Types of goal setting

A

performance goal: concerned with technique such as toss the ball higher in a tennis serve

outcome goal: concerned with end result or winning such as a tennis serve landing in

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16
Q

Social benefits of physical activity

A

increase friendship groups - meeting new people
increases sense of belonging - feeling part of a team
socially active - more chance to meet socially

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17
Q

Physical benefits of physical activity

A

prevents injury - increases flexibility
decreases risk of heart disease - lowers blood fat
increases bone density - new bone growth
prevents obesity - lowers body fat
increases fitness and maintains good posture - strengthens core muscles and prevents lower back pain

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18
Q

Emotional benefits of physical activity

A

increases self esteem - release of endorphins
improves confidence - experiencing success
manages stress - endorphins will improve mood
provides a positive body image - happy with physique

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19
Q

Social consequences of no physical activity

A

small friendship group - lack of opportunities to develop new friendships
feeling isolated - not feeling part of a group
loneliness - lack of people to talk to and interact with

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20
Q

Physical consequences of no physical activity

A

increases risk injury - poor flexibility
increases risk of heart disease - higher blood fat
lower bone density - increase chance of fractures
leads to obesity - stored fat is high
poor fitness and posture - weak core muscles lead to lower back pain

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21
Q

Emotional consequences of no physical activity

A

decreases self esteem - poor body image
poor management of stress - lack of ways to release stress
negative body image - not liking the shape or size of your body

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22
Q

A motor skill

A

a skill that involved limb movement
a learned movement response can be open/ closed/ simple/ complex

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23
Q

Mechanical guidance

A

use of equipment e.g. a swimmer using a float

advantages:
reduces fear
increases safety
raises confidence

disadvantages:
unrealistic feeling
overreliance on the support
dangerous if incorrect

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24
Q

Manual guidance

A

Giving physical support e.g. a coach holding the legs of a gymnast doing a handstand

advantages:
reduces fear
increases safety
raises confidence

disadvantages:
unrealistic feeling
overreliance on the support
dangerous if incorrect

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25
Q

Verbal guidance

A

describe or explain how to perform a skill usually done alongside visual guidance

26
Q

Visual guidance

A

demonstrations, video, pictures used to show a performer what is required

advantages:
good for beginners
easy to remember
quick and effective

disadvantages:
hard to get a feel for the skill
can be too complicated

27
Q

Mental preparation

A

imagery
mental rehearsal (internal and external imagery)
selective attention
positive thinking

28
Q

Mental preparation - imagery

A

a creation of pictures in the mind to improve concentration, confidence, reduce anxiety or stress, make the performer happy and relaxed or calm

e.g. a footballer thinking of a calm or relaxing place before a cup final

29
Q

Mental preparation - mental rehearsal

A

forming a mental image of them performing the skill

internal imagery - from their own view point
external imagery - out of body point of view

e.g. a gymnast imagining themselves performing a routine

30
Q

Mental preparation - selective attention

A

concentrating on relevant information and ignores distractions

e.g. golfer filtering out the noise of the crowd and focus only on the ball

31
Q

Mental preparation - positive thinking

A

talking to themselves or thinking positively about a past performance

e.g. a footballer preparing for a penalty saying to himself ‘you can do it’ or ‘remember the time you scored a penalty’

32
Q

What is a sedentary lifestyle?

A

inactivity or lack of exercise such as sat at a desk all day, driving everywhere, taking part in no physical activity

33
Q

Stimulants

A

effects:
increases alertness
increases concentration
increased endurance of athletes

negatives:
sleep problems
anxiety

examples:
sprinters, motor sports

34
Q

Beta- blockers

A

effects:
decreases blood pressure
decreases heart rate
decreases anxiety

negatives:
dizzy spells
tiredness
stomach problems

examples:
snooker, archery and shooting

35
Q

Anabolic steroids

A

effects:
increased muscle mass and strength
speeds up recovery
increases duration and intensity of training

negatives:
aggression and mood swings
liver damage and heart failure

examples:
weightlifters, sprinters, rugby

36
Q

Definition of Health, Fitness and Well-being

A

health - a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being

fitness - the capacity to carry out life’s activities without getting too tired

well-being - the feeling or mental state of being content, happy and healthy

37
Q

What is a healthy, balanced lifestyle?

A

a healthy and balanced diet
regular exercise
maintaining a healthy bodyweight
not smoking or drinking
minimising stress
maintaining positive relationships

38
Q

Components of a balanced diet

A

carbohydrates
proteins
fats
vitamins and minerals
fibre
water and hydration

39
Q

carbohydrates

A

provide us with energy for muscle contraction (75%)
it is stored in the muscle as glycogen
examples - pasta and potatoes

example: long distance sports like marathon runner or football player (midfield)

40
Q

Fats

A

insulate and cushion organs and can provide energy which is stored
examples - fish, oil, peanut butter

example: endurance sports like triathlon

41
Q

fibre

A

helps with regular bowl movements and the large intestine to function
examples - cereals and beans

example: any sport as long as its linked to ability to train and perform and not having bowl problems

42
Q

Vitamins and minerals

A

help with blood clotting, connective tissue and bone health
examples - fruit and vegetables

example: any sport but linked to strong bones such as a footballer

43
Q

Water and hydration

A

helps to move substances around the body and allows chemical reactions to take place
replaces fluids lost to sweating
examples - water or hydration sports drinks

example: endurance sports like a marathon runner, netball, rugby or football

44
Q

proteins

A

helps the growth and repair of the muscles
produces haemoglobin
examples - fish and meat

example: building power and strength such as weight lifter, rugby player and 100m sprinter

45
Q

the environmental continuum

A

open - effected by the environment (pass in football)

closed - not effected by environment (tennis serve)

46
Q

the difficulty continuum

A

simple - not a lot of judgements or decisions to make (sprint sport)

complex - lots of judgements and decisions (netball pass)

47
Q

Golden triangle

A

links between all three: sport, media and sponsorship
interdependent
all three need each other

48
Q

Media - Negatives

A

pay per view limit access - champions league only on BT Sport

poor role models highlighted - Lance Armstrong caught taking drugs so cycling has a damaged reputation

controls or changes sports - VAR in football

49
Q

Deviance in sport

A

cheating - behaviour against the written rules of sport

examples:
two footed tackle in football
headbutt in boxing
taking performance enhancing drugs

50
Q

Gender

A

men participate more than women by around 10% more

reasons:
more media and funding for perceived male sports like football and rugby
less funding for female sports
females discriminated against some sports

51
Q

Improving participation

A

promotion - increase awareness of role models, opportunities and choices

provision - making coaches, facilities and equipment available

access - reducing cost, disabled facilities, women/ older adults only sessions, providing transport

52
Q

What is commercialisation?

A

influence of business on sport to make a profit or people using sports to make a profit

53
Q

Sportsmanship

A

behaviour that shows respect and fair play towards other players, officials and spectators

kicking the ball out of play in football after an injury
shaking hands before and after the game
batsman ‘walking’ in cricket if they are out

54
Q

Sponsorship - Negatives

A

bad image for the sport if linked to fast food/ alcohol -
McDonalds sponsoring the Olympic games

pressure from sponsors on the athletes -
Nike pressuring Mo Farrah

only the top athletes/ teams receive sponsorship -
Mo Farrah in athletics

55
Q

Media - Positives

A

Generates funding - McDonalds sponsor FA, more money for grassroots football

Promotes role models - media created Anthony Joshua as a role model

Increases participation - tennis participation increases when Wimbledon is on the BBC

Promotes minority sports - Sports like Curling are promoted during the winter olympics

56
Q

Why is sportsmanship important?

A

makes the activity more enjoyable
encourages a good atmosphere
helps officials, referees and umpires
helps the game to flow
makes it safer
makes it fairer
creates good role models

57
Q

Gamesmanship

A

bending the rules to gain an unfair advantage
using unethical methods to try and win

footballer diving to get a foul
tennis player delaying their serve
netball player holding onto their opponent
moving the ball closer to the posts in a penalty in rugby
sledging in cricket

58
Q

Sponsorship - Positives

A

generates funding - Emirates sponsor Arsenal’s stadium so they have more money to spend on players

pays for facilities - Emirates sponsor Arsenal so they can build more training pitches

full time training - Nike sponsor Mo Farrah so he can train full time

59
Q

Reasons for Deviance in sport

A

to enhance performance
pressure to win
retaliation/ revenge
reaction to a poor referee decision
as a result of taking drugs

60
Q

Trends in sport participation

A

disability - low but increasing participation rates (17%) amongst disabled people

reasons:
lack of facilities and provision available and some may have a lack of money for facilities and equipment