IB Syllabus focus: 'Safe and effective programme design depends on training principles: specificity, progressive overload, recovery, variety, reversibility and periodization. Baseline values and progress measurement are important components.'
Training principles give structure to exercise planning. When they are applied together, they help athletes improve safely, match training to performance goals, and judge whether a program is producing meaningful change.
Building safe and effective training programs
A training program is more than a list of workouts. It is a planned sequence of exercise that aims to improve a specific performance or fitness outcome while limiting unnecessary risk. The main training principles are linked, so strong program design depends on balancing them rather than treating them as separate ideas.
Specificity
Practice Questions
FAQ
No. Specificity means the program should clearly support the performance goal, but that does not require every exercise to be identical to the competitive movement.
Some exercises are highly direct, while others build supporting qualities such as strength, stability, or movement control. The key question is whether the exercise has a clear transfer to the target performance.
Raising both at once creates a much larger jump in overall training load. That can make fatigue harder to manage and increase the chance of poor technique or excessive soreness.
It also becomes difficult to identify what caused a problem. Many coaches prefer to change one main variable first, then monitor the athlete’s response before making another major increase.
It depends on the quality being tracked. Simple measures such as training completion or perceived effort can be checked often, while maximal performance tests are usually spaced further apart.
Testing too often can interrupt training and create fatigue. Testing too rarely can hide plateaus or poor progression. Good practice is to measure often enough to guide decisions, but not so often that testing replaces training.
Planned variety serves a purpose. It changes exercises or session design while still supporting the same overall training goal.
Random change is usually based on novelty rather than progression. If sessions change too much, it becomes harder to compare results, apply overload consistently, or know which methods are actually working.
A very short planned break usually does not erase fitness, especially if it is part of a well-structured program. In some cases, brief reductions in load can improve freshness and later performance.
Reversibility becomes more important when the reduction is long enough or frequent enough that the body no longer receives a meaningful training stimulus. Keeping some targeted work in the plan can help maintain key adaptations.
