Moving with skill and control
Students sharpen the basics of running, jumping, throwing, catching, and kicking. The focus is on doing each move with better form and control than last year, not just speed.
This is the year movement skills come together into real games and team play. Students dribble, pass, strike, and jump with more control, and they start to see how fitness, effort, and practice change what their body can do. They also learn to cooperate, settle small conflicts, and lead a warm-up without an adult stepping in. By spring, students can join a group activity, follow the rules, and explain one fitness habit they want to keep.
Students sharpen the basics of running, jumping, throwing, catching, and kicking. The focus is on doing each move with better form and control than last year, not just speed.
Students put their skills into real games. They learn positions, simple strategy, and how to read what teammates and opponents are doing during play.
Students learn what makes a workout build strength, stamina, or flexibility. They check their own heart rate and start to notice how their body feels during different activities.
Students practice the social side of P.E.: taking turns, listening to teammates, handling wins and losses, and including classmates of different skill levels.
Students reflect on which activities they actually enjoy and set small personal goals. The year ends with the idea that staying active is a choice they keep making outside of school.
Students practice moving in different ways, such as running, balancing, and throwing or catching, to build the physical skills they'll use in sports, games, and active play for years to come.
Students use what they know about how the body moves and stays fit to make better choices during physical activities, like adjusting pace on a run or spacing out during a game.
Students practice working with classmates during physical activities. That means taking turns, listening, and handling wins and losses without making it a big deal.
Students identify why moving regularly feels good and matters long-term, then practice choosing activities they actually want to keep doing. The focus is building habits, not just passing a fitness test.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Develop a variety of motor skills, including locomotor, non-locomotor | Students practice moving in different ways, such as running, balancing, and throwing or catching, to build the physical skills they'll use in sports, games, and active play for years to come. | IL-PE.1.5 |
| Apply knowledge related to movement, performance | Students use what they know about how the body moves and stays fit to make better choices during physical activities, like adjusting pace on a run or spacing out during a game. | IL-PE.2.5 |
| Develop social skills through movement, including respect for self and others… | Students practice working with classmates during physical activities. That means taking turns, listening, and handling wins and losses without making it a big deal. | IL-PE.3.5 |
| Develop personal skills, identify personal benefits of movement | Students identify why moving regularly feels good and matters long-term, then practice choosing activities they actually want to keep doing. The focus is building habits, not just passing a fitness test. | IL-PE.4.5 |
Students move from learning single skills to combining them in real games and routines. Expect work on running, jumping, throwing, catching, dribbling, and striking, used inside team games, dance, and fitness activities. Students also start tracking their own effort and setting small fitness goals.
Pick one skill and practice it in short bursts, like ten minutes of catching with a tennis ball or dribbling in the driveway. Progress at this age comes from repetition, not talent. Praise effort and small improvements, and avoid comparing siblings or classmates.
Aim for about an hour of active play most days, broken into chunks if needed. Walking the dog, biking, playing tag, swimming, and dancing all count. The goal is the habit, not the sport.
A common arc is fitness and movement basics in the fall, invasion and net games in the winter, and striking, fielding, and track-style events in the spring. Revisit locomotor and manipulative skills inside each unit so students keep practicing throwing, catching, and footwork all year.
Students can combine skills under pressure, such as dribbling and passing in a small-sided game, or striking a moving ball with control. They also explain why warm-ups, pacing, and rest matter, and they cooperate with a partner or team without constant adult prompting.
Overhand throwing mechanics, catching with the hands instead of the body, and striking a moving object are the common sticking points. Off the equipment side, students often need reminders on sportsmanship after losses and on including quieter classmates in group play.
Talk through small moments at home, like what to do when a teammate hogs the ball or when a game feels unfair. Practice simple language for joining a group, asking for the ball, and shaking off a bad play. These habits matter as much as the physical skills.
Students should be able to explain the difference between warming up and stretching, point to activities that raise the heart rate, and name a personal fitness goal. Short reflections, fitness logs, and quick exit tickets work well alongside skill checks.
Students should be willing to try new activities, follow multi-step game rules, and keep moving for longer stretches without quitting. They should also handle winning and losing without melting down. If any of these are shaky, a rec league or family activity over the summer helps.