7th Grade PE Re-teach Plans
Correct movement errors, strategy misconceptions, safety habit gaps, and motor skill breakdowns with targeted PE re-teach plans.
Generate a 7th Grade PE Re-teach Plan
Input what students struggled with and get a targeted intervention plan with strategies, activities, and exit tickets.
Try the Re-teach PlannerWhy PE Misconceptions Persist
PE skill gaps often come from students developing movement habits that feel natural but are technically incorrect — and these habits are reinforced by repetition. Students also conflate sport rules with physical skill, or struggle to transfer a skill demonstrated by the teacher to their own body.
Common 7th Grade PE Misconceptions
Throwing Mechanics
Students throw with the wrong foot forward, don't transfer weight, or use only arm strength rather than whole-body mechanics.
What It Looks Like
- ✗Stepping with the same-side foot as the throwing arm (no hip rotation)
- ✗Releasing at the wrong point in the throw arc
- ✗Elbow below shoulder level throughout the throw
- ✗Not following through after release
Re-teach Strategies
- ✓Step-clap drill: step with opposite foot and clap before throwing
- ✓Wall target throw: focus on point of release and follow-through separately
- ✓Part-practice: isolate step, then add arm, then put together
- ✓Video model comparison: watch correct throw side by side with slow-motion common error
Defensive Positioning
Students stand flat-footed, watch the ball only, or position themselves too close or far from the opponent to be effective.
What It Looks Like
- ✗Guarding without athletic stance (knees bent, weight forward)
- ✗Following the ball rather than the opponent in man defense
- ✗Standing directly in front of an offensive player rather than slightly beside
Re-teach Strategies
- ✓Athletic stance drill: hold 5 seconds, coach gives feedback before movement is added
- ✓Shadowing drill: mirror partner's movement without ball to build footwork habit
- ✓Map it: place cones showing correct defensive triangle position relative to ball and player
- ✓Slow scrimmage: no scoring until defensive positioning requirement is met
Cardiovascular Pacing
Students start at maximum effort and fade, or don't understand the relationship between pacing and distance performance.
What It Looks Like
- ✗Sprint the first lap of a mile run and walk the last three
- ✗Not understanding perceived exertion as a pacing tool
- ✗Heart rate recovery not understood as a sign of cardiovascular fitness
Re-teach Strategies
- ✓Perceived exertion scale: rate 1–10 effort, discuss what 6–7 feels like vs. 10
- ✓Pacing run: students aim to hit the same time on each lap of a longer run
- ✓Heart rate check: 15-second count × 4 before, during, and after exercise — graph the results
- ✓Race a pace: identify goal time, calculate per-lap pace, run to that target
Fair Play and Sportsmanship
Students apply rules selectively, argue calls, or conflate winning with enjoyment — leading to disengagement or unsportsmanlike behavior.
What It Looks Like
- ✗Claiming a point they didn't earn when the teacher isn't watching
- ✗Refusing to acknowledge a good play by the other team
- ✗Quitting or disrupting play after losing a point
Re-teach Strategies
- ✓Pre-game sportsmanship checklist read aloud by a student before play
- ✓Role-play difficult scenarios (disputed call, unfair advantage) and discuss responses
- ✓Praise specific sportsmanlike moments during debrief, not just physical performance
- ✓Students officiate their own game with structured peer accountability
Intervention Approaches for PE
Slow Motion with Verbal Cue: Break skill into named parts with a cue word for each step
Part-Practice: Drill each component of the skill before combining in full movement
Peer Coaching: Partner provides feedback based on a specific check (one cue only)
Video Model: Show correct form at full speed, then slow motion — students identify key positions
Environmental Manipulation: Adjust equipment (lighter ball, lower net, smaller field) to allow success while building technique
Data to Collect Before Re-teaching
- Motor skill checklist: observe each student perform skill, mark present/absent for each key component
- Skill test: count successful attempts out of 10 trials on target task
- Heart rate or activity tracker data for fitness-related concepts
- Student self-assessment: which part of the skill felt hardest? can you name the steps?
- Peer observation form: partner marks 3 specific technique checkpoints during practice
Exit Ticket Ideas
- Name the 3 steps of the skill we practiced today in order
- What's one thing you corrected in your [throwing/catching/dribbling] technique today?
- What does sportsmanship look like in a game where you're losing?
- Rate your effort today 1–5 and describe what effort 7 would feel like
Re-teach Tips for PE
PE re-teach is most effective with immediate feedback during practice, not at the end of the class
One cue per practice session — students can't self-monitor multiple corrections simultaneously
Games should follow skill practice, not precede it — play reinforces habits, correct or incorrect
Student demonstration of incorrect form (with permission) can be more memorable than teacher modeling of correct form
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I re-teach motor skills to students who have developed bad habits?
Slow the movement down first. Have students perform the skill at half-speed focusing on the specific incorrect component. Speed comes back after the correct pattern is established.
How do I manage a class while re-teaching a small group?
Station rotation: students at stations practice drills while you work intensively with the group that needs re-teaching. Keep station tasks simple enough to be self-managed.
What if students resist re-teach because they think they're already doing it right?
Video them. Students who see themselves performing often recognize the error immediately. Keep it matter-of-fact — 'watch this and tell me what you notice about your elbow.'
How do I assess if re-teach worked in PE?
Performance task: ask students to perform the skill under conditions similar to the original assessment. Count successful trials or use the same technique checklist as a before/after comparison.
Re-teach Plans by Grade
7th Grade Re-teach by Subject
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