School age: the skill and variety window
This period is the golden age of motor learning: children pick up new skills faster than at any other time of life. The targets are 60 minutes of moderate-vigorous activity daily, muscle- and bone-strengthening movement at least 3 days a week, and sampling more than one sport.
Daily & weekly targets (WHO 2020)
60 min
Daily moderate-vigorous activity
Can be split across the day; most days of the week
3 days
Muscle-bone strengthening
Jumping, climbing, bodyweight games
2+ sports
Sport variety
A broad base instead of early specialization
Sample weekly programme
School PE and recess movement count toward this plan; trained children substitute their training days.
Aerobic play
Cycling, rope skipping or chase games; walking to school
Strength (bodyweight)
Climbing, push-up/sit-up games, animal walks, core games
Ball sports
Football, basketball or volleyball — skill-focused small-sided games
Jumping & agility
Hopscotch, ladder drills, rope skipping, obstacle course (bone health)
Swimming or racket sport
Variety day for different movement patterns
Free outdoor time
Park, nature walk, skating, neighbourhood games
Active rest
Light family walk, stretching games; avoid a fully sedentary day
Do
- •Expose them to at least two different sports/activity types; skill transfer pays off later.
- •Spread jumping activities (rope skipping, basketball) across the week for bone strengthening.
- •Make activity social: training with friends improves adherence.
- •Trade screen time for movement: a 30-min screen → 10-min movement break rule works.
Avoid
- •Locking into a single sport before age 12 increases injury and dropout risk.
- •Training more weekly hours than the child’s age in one sport year-round (e.g. 9+ hours at age 9) signals overuse.
- •Training through pain ("it will pass" culture) hides growth-plate injuries.
- •Win-focused early selection unfairly cuts late developers.
Video guide
An indoor alternative for rainy days:
10 min Kids Cardio Workout — HIIT, no equipment (ages 8-16)
Group HIIT · 30/20 s intervals
Frequently asked questions
How do I count the 60 minutes?
Anything that raises breathing counts: walking to school, recess running, PE, training, park play. No smartwatch needed; "can talk but can’t sing" intensity is moderate-vigorous.
Can children lift weights at this age?
Bodyweight, resistance bands and learning technique with light medicine balls are safe and recommended (NSCA 2009). Maximal lifts should wait until post-PHV.
How do I know if my child is "talented" at sport?
Performance at this age largely reflects differences in biological maturity; late developers often overtake later. Preserve skill variety and love of sport instead of talent prediction. See our bio-banding article.
Scientific basis
WHO Guidelines on physical activity and sedentary behaviour (2020); Faigenbaum et al., NSCA Youth Resistance Training Position Statement (2009); Lloyd & Oliver, Youth Physical Development Model (2012); AAP Sports Specialization guidance (2016).This programme is educational. Consult your clinician for chronic illness, injury history or pain with exercise.