大象传媒

How to complete the Personal Fitness Programme (PFP)

A PFP is designed to meet the specific needs of an individual athlete. Typically it includes:

Introduction

  • aim 鈥 the general skills or fitness you plan to improve for which sport and why
  • profile of who the PFP is for 鈥 age, sex, performance level, experience
  • brief overview of training programme 鈥 duration, frequency and type
  • how you will show progress 鈥 the tests and measures you will use

Baseline tests

  • summary of tests used to measure current skill and fitness components
  • test results

Evaluation of strengths and weaknesses

From the test results, a summary of:

  • strengths
  • areas to improve

Priority areas for this PFP

  • specify the skill and/or fitness components to be improved
  • set a SMART target for each component: specific, measurable, achievable, realistic, time-bound

See Goal setting to find out more about SMART targets.

Training plan

Details of training plan related to the principles of training:

  • detailed monitoring and adjustments
  • evidence of principles of training

Results

  • results following the repeat of baseline tests

Evaluation

  • effectiveness of the training programme in improving the specified components
  • how to maintain, extend or improve the training programme

For support in writing a PFP, see Principles of training.