Personal Trainers should be able to answer the following questions
Program design
A purposeful system or plan put together to help an individual achieve a specific goal
Acute variables
Important components that specify how each exercise is to be performed; collectively, they are the foundation of program design
Repetition (or “rep”)
One complete movement of a single exercise
Set
A group of consecutive repetitions
Training intensity
An individual’s level of effort, compared with their maximal effort, which is usually expressed as a percentage
Repetition tempo
The speed with which each repetition is performed
Rest Interval
The time taken to recuperate between sets
Training volume
Amount of physical training performed within a specified time; always inversely related to intesnity
Based on:
- Training phase, goals, age, work capacity or training status, recoverability, nutritional status, injury history, life stress
Training frequency
The number of training sessions performed during a specified period (usually 1 week)
Training Volume Adaptations
High Volume (Low/Moderate Intensity:
Low Volume (High Intensity)
Training duration
The timeframe of a workout or the length of time spent in one phase of training
Exercise selection
The process of choosing appropriate exercises for a client’s program
3 Types of Exercise Selections
Examples of Exercise Selection
STABILIZATION LEVEL
STRENGTH LEVEL
POWER LEVEL
Stabilization exercises
◆ Chest press on a stability ball
◆ Single-leg cable rows
◆ Single-leg dumbbell shoulder press on a ½ foam roll
◆ Single-leg squat
Strength exercises
◆ Bench press
◆ Rows (machine, seated cable, barbell)
◆ Shoulder press (seated barbell, seated dumbbell, machine)
◆ Squats/leg press
Power Exercises
◆ Overhead medicine ball throw ◆ Medicine ball chest pass ◆ Woodchop throw ◆ Squat jump ◆ Tuck jump ◆ Two-arm push press ◆ Barbell clean
Training plan
The specific outline, created by a fitness professional to meet a client’s goals, that details the form of training, length of time, future changes, and specific exercises to be performed
Annual plan
Generalized training plan that spans 1 year to show when the client will progress between phases
Monthly plan
Generalized training plan that spans 1 month and shows which phases will be requir3ed each day of the week
Weekly plan
Training plan of specific workouts that spans 1 week and shows which exercises are required each day of the week
What are the “periodization” cycles?
Annual Plan - Macrocycle; 1 year
Monthly Plan - Mesocycle; 1-3 months
Weekly Plan - Microcycle; weekly
Summary Chart of the OPT Model
Level 1: STABILIZATION
Specific Adaptation - Endurance & stability
Phases Used - 1
Method of Progression - Proprioception (controlled unstable)
Level 2: STRENGTH
Specific Adaptation - Strength endurance, Hypertrophy & Maximal Strength
Phases Used - 2, 3, 4
Method of Progression - Volume/load
Level 3: POWER
Specific Adaptation - Power
Phases Used - 5
Method of Progression - Speed/load