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Principles of Weight Training | Fitness and Exercise Glossary
March 30, 2008 on 9:05 pm | By Matt | In Glossary | No CommentsThere are four basic principles of weight training:
These principles work together to ensure that a person meets their weight training goals.
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Sphere: Related ContentRest and Recovery (Principles of Weight Training) | Fitness and Exercise Glossary
March 30, 2008 on 9:01 pm | By Matt | In Glossary | No CommentsRest and recovery is the fourth principle of weight training. It says that each muscle requires adequate time to rest and recover between workouts.
The actual duration of the rest and recovery period may vary from individual-to-individual based on factors like their current physical condition, prior weight training experience, diet, and the intensity and volume of their training.
A good rule of thumb is to provide 48 hours of rest and recovery time before working the same muscle again.
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Sphere: Related ContentSpecificity (Principles of Weight Training) | Fitness and Exercise Glossary
March 30, 2008 on 8:54 pm | By Matt | In Glossary | No CommentsSpecificity is one of the four principles of weight training. Specificity means that you train your muscles and choose your exercises, weight, reps and sets with a specific goal in mind.
These goals typically fall into one of four groups:
- strength
- size (hypertrophy)
- endurance
- power
Depending on the goal, the nature of the exercise you choose, the weight, the amount of reps and sets, and the pace at which you perform them will vary.
For example, training for strength typically involves using a heavier weight that causes the muscle to fail at between one and four reps, while endurance training uses a lighter weight that causes failure at 15 to 20 reps.
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Sphere: Related ContentProgression (Principles of Weight Training) | Fitness and Exercise Glossary
March 30, 2008 on 8:27 pm | By Matt | In Glossary | No CommentsOne of the four principals of weight training, progression is the act of gradually adding to the amount or type of stimulus applied to the muscle during each exercise.
Without consistent progression in your workouts, you won’t overload your muscles sufficiently to promote optimum increases in hypertrophy (muscle size), strength and endurance. Progression can be achieved by continuously changing the stimulus applied to the muscle.
These changes can include progressively increasing the weight used during an exercise, the total amount of work performed (volume and reps), time that the muscle is under tension (tempo), frequency of training, and the introduction of additional exercises or variations on the exercise performed.
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Sphere: Related ContentOverload (Principles of Weight Training): Fitness and Exercise Glossary
March 30, 2008 on 7:56 pm | By Matt | In Glossary | No CommentsOne of the four principles of weight training, overload states that a greater than normal amount of stress or load on the body is required for training adaptation to occur.
Once overload has been achieved, the body will adapt to this stimulus, which requires you to change the stimulus yet again to progress in your training goals, whether that is increased strength, size or endurance.
Muscles may be overload by adding additional weight, increasing reps or increasing sets (volume), as well as slowing the tempo of an exercise. Maintaining the same level of stimulus will maintain previous gains (but not increase them) and removing or pulling back on the level of stimulus, will cause regression in strength, size or endurance.
The act of continuously overloading muscles is called progression.
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