2nd Grade Physical Education Unit Plan Template
PE unit plans develop motor skills, fitness knowledge, and game strategy alongside the habits of lifelong physical activity — the best units connect movement to health, teamwork, and personal goal-setting.
Typical unit length: 2–4 weeks · ages 7–8
Generate a Complete 2nd Grade Physical Education Unit Plan
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Try the Unit Plan Generator →Big Ideas in Physical Education
Strong unit plans are organized around enduring understandings — the big ideas that outlast the specific content. In Physical Education, these core concepts anchor all unit planning.
Physical literacy: the skills, knowledge, and confidence to be active for life
Health-related fitness: cardiovascular endurance, muscular strength, flexibility, body composition
Motor skill development follows a progression from fundamental patterns to sport-specific applications
Teamwork, sportsmanship, and cooperation are skills that require explicit teaching and practice
Personal fitness goal-setting builds intrinsic motivation beyond the PE class
Key Components of a Physical Education Unit Plan
Every strong 2nd Grade Physical Education unit plan includes these elements. Together they ensure coherent, standards-aligned instruction with clear assessment.
Sport / Activity Focus
The primary movement skill or sport the unit is built around
Motor Skill Progression
The sequence of skill development from basic to complex
Fitness Component
The health-related fitness element integrated into the unit
Strategy / Cognitive Component
The tactical thinking and game knowledge component
Personal Goal-Setting
Students set and track individual improvement goals throughout the unit
Sportsmanship / SEL Component
The social-emotional learning integrated into the physical activity
Sample 2nd Grade Physical Education Units
Assessment Ideas for Physical Education Units
Skills rubric: teacher observes and scores specific technique criteria during drill or game play
Fitness test: pre/post data showing personal improvement across the unit
Written reflection: students analyze their own performance and set goals for next unit
Peer assessment: structured observation checklist during partner practice
Game play observation: teacher assesses decision-making and sportsmanship during actual game
Unit Planning Tips for Physical Education
Personal best over competition: framing PE around individual improvement keeps all fitness levels engaged
Station rotations allow skill differentiation without ability grouping — students self-adjust difficulty within stations
Fitness journals connect classroom learning to physical activity — students track effort, heart rate, and goal progress
Physical activity literacy matters: students who understand WHY exercise matters are more likely to choose it as adults
FAQ: 2nd Grade Physical Education Unit Plans
How do I write a PE unit plan when every class period is separate and time is limited?
Use the first 5 minutes for skill review from the previous session, 30 minutes for skill practice or game play, and 5 minutes for cool-down and reflection. Keep the skill focus consistent across all sessions in the unit — repetition builds motor memory.
How do I assess PE skills fairly without making students feel judged for their fitness level?
Assess growth and effort, not innate athletic ability. A student who improves their push-up count from 5 to 12 is succeeding. Use pre/post skill checks so assessment shows change, and frame it as 'how are you improving?' not 'how do you compare to others?'
What if students don't want to participate in certain activities?
Choice within the unit helps: during a dance unit, offer hip-hop, folk, or line dance options. For sports, offer modified rules or equipment. The physical education standard is about participation and skill development — the specific activity is more flexible than the standard.