New
New
Lesson 5 of 10
  • Year 10
  • OCR

Long jump

I can effectively combine the phases of the long jump to maximise my performance and distance.

Lesson 5 of 10
New
New
  • Year 10
  • OCR

Long jump

I can effectively combine the phases of the long jump to maximise my performance and distance.

These resources will be removed by end of Summer Term 2025.

Switch to our new teaching resources now - designed by teachers and leading subject experts, and tested in classrooms.

These resources were created for remote use during the pandemic and are not designed for classroom teaching.

Lesson details

Key learning points

  1. Move: a measured approach with the dominant foot hitting the board at the ideal point will allow for a maximal distance.
  2. Move: performing a flight phase which allows the body to hang and prepare for landing increases the distance jumped.
  3. Think: taking off at a 20 degree angle will ensure the optimal transfer of momentum.
  4. Feel: by preparing mentally before the approach, you can perform with maximal effort showing self-motivation.
  5. Connect: supporting the accurate measurement of each other's approach distance will ensure best results can be achieved.

Keywords

  • Approach - the first phase of the long jump in which momentum is created in preparation for the jump

  • Dominant foot - the foot which will propel you at the end of the approach

  • Landing - the final phase of the long jump in which you enter the sand

Common misconception

Pupils believe starting their approach from the furthest point on the runway will result in the best possible approach and jump.

The approach is personalised and should be measured to ensure optimal speed is reached and the take off is smooth without the need to break stride. For most, the end of the runway will not be the ideal starting point.


To help you plan your year 10 physical education lesson on: Long jump, download all teaching resources for free and adapt to suit your pupils' needs...

Much of the technique practice and preparation for long jump can be delivered away from the long jump runway and pit to maximise activity levels and learning. If you intend to teach triple jump, keep a record of pupil run up distances to save time.
Teacher tip

Equipment

30m tape measures, a stack of multi-coloured cones, a device for filming if available, recording sheet.

Content guidance

  • Risk assessment required - physical activity

Supervision

Adult supervision required

Licence

This content is © Oak National Academy Limited (2025), licensed on Open Government Licence version 3.0 except where otherwise stated. See Oak's terms & conditions (Collection 2).

Prior knowledge starter quiz

Download quiz pdf

4 Questions

Q1.
What pace should you be running the first few metres of a middle distance race?

Correct answer: your race pace
a sprint
jog pace

Q2.
What is achieved by running the second lap faster than the first?

a split
fast split
Correct answer: negative split

Q3.
How can spectator encouragement help?

Correct answer: increase motivation
relieve boredom
break the silence

Q4.
How is your body working during the ‘kick’?

aerobically
Correct answer: anaerobically
sedentary

Assessment exit quiz

Download quiz pdf

4 Questions

Q1.
Which of these is a mental preparation technique to improve performance?

Correct answer: imagine perfect performance
do some stretching
raise heart rate

Q2.
Which part of the body sinks to lower your centre of gravity before take off?

Correct Answer: hips, hip

Q3.
What is the ideal angle of take off?

Correct answer: 20 degrees
40 degrees
10 degrees

Q4.
Why is taking off before the board ineffective?

it’s a foul
less speed generated
Correct answer: you lose distance

Additional material

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