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What does a student learn in ?

This is the year movement starts to feel like strategy. Students sharpen the basics, like throwing, catching, kicking, and dribbling, and use them inside real games where they have to think about where to move and why. They also start tracking their own fitness and learning to play fairly when a game gets tense. By spring, students can play a small-sided game and explain a smart choice they made during it.

Illustration of what students learn in Grade 4 Physical Education
  • Motor skills
  • Game strategy
  • Fitness habits
  • Fair play
  • Teamwork
Source: New York P-12 Learning Standards
Year at a glance
How the year usually goes. Every school and district set their own curriculum, so treat this as a guide, not official pacing.
  1. 1

    Movement skills and teamwork basics

    Students sharpen running, jumping, throwing, and catching in group games. They also practice the habits that make gym work for everyone, like taking turns and including classmates.

  2. 2

    Games, strategy, and fair play

    Students start using simple strategy in team games, such as spreading out on the field or passing to an open teammate. They learn why the rules exist and how to handle winning and losing.

  3. 3

    Fitness and healthy habits

    Students build stamina, strength, and flexibility through activities like running, jumping rope, and stretching. They learn how regular activity, sleep, and water keep the body feeling good.

  4. 4

    Dance, rhythm, and self-expression

    Students try movement set to music, including simple dances and rhythm routines. They get more comfortable trying new things in front of classmates and cheering others on.

  5. 5

    Activity for life and community

    Students think about which activities they enjoy outside of school, from biking to swimming to playing tag at the park. They start to see how staying active fits into family and neighborhood life.

Mastery Learning Standards
The required skills a student should display by the end of Grade 4.
Physical Education
Standard Definition Code

Moving your body with skill and control

Students practice foundational movements like throwing, catching, jumping, and balancing across different activities. The goal is to get comfortable with a range of physical skills, not just one or two.

NY-PE.1.4

How your body moves and why

Students use what they know about speed, space, and body position to make smarter decisions during games and activities. They start connecting the "why" behind movement to what actually works in play.

NY-PE.2.4

Staying active and fit for life

Students practice staying active in ways that build lasting fitness, not just for PE class. They learn how hard to push, when to rest, and how to make physical activity a regular habit.

NY-PE.3.4

Respect yourself and others in PE

Students follow class rules, take turns, and treat teammates with respect during physical activities. This standard covers how students act toward others, handle winning or losing, and stay safe in gym class.

NY-PE.4.4

Why being active is good for you

Students explain why staying active matters beyond just fitness, such as how a sport can feel fun, push them to improve, or give them a way to connect with others.

NY-PE.5.4

Fitness careers and healthy community habits

Students learn that jobs like coaching, athletic training, and physical therapy exist, and they practice finding local places and tools that help them stay active and healthy.

NY-PE.6.4
Common Questions
  • What should students be able to do in PE by the end of the year?

    Students should throw, catch, kick, dribble, jump, and strike with control in games and activities. They should also follow rules, work with a partner or team, and understand why staying active matters for their health.

  • How can families support PE skills at home?

    Spend ten minutes a day on simple active play like playing catch, jumping rope, riding a bike, or kicking a ball in the yard. The goal is regular practice and enjoyment, not drills. Walks after dinner count too.

  • My child says they are bad at sports. What can I do?

    Pick one skill at a time, like catching a tennis ball off a wall or dribbling a basketball ten times in a row. Short, low-pressure practice builds confidence faster than full games. Praise effort and small wins.

  • How much physical activity should students get outside of school?

    Aim for about 60 minutes of active play most days. It does not need to happen all at once. Bike rides, playground time, dance, swimming, and backyard games all count toward the total.

  • How should motor skills be sequenced across the year?

    Start the year with locomotor work and underhand and overhand throwing, then move into dribbling, passing, and striking with hands and short implements. Save small-sided games for later units once skills are steady. Revisit earlier skills inside new game contexts.

  • What does mastery look like at this level?

    Students apply skills in modified games, not just isolated drills. Look for control under light pressure, decent body position, and the ability to talk about simple strategy such as moving to open space or guarding a partner.

  • Which areas usually need the most reteaching?

    Striking with an implement and catching a moving ball trip up the most students. Cooperative behavior in small-sided games also needs ongoing coaching. Build in short skill stations and quick teacher check-ins before each game day.

  • How are personal and social behaviors taught in PE?

    Set clear routines for safety, sharing equipment, and including everyone. Use short team challenges that require talking and problem solving. Name the behavior you want, such as encouraging a teammate, and call it out when students do it.

  • How do students learn about fitness and wellness at this age?

    Students learn to notice their heart rate, breathing, and effort during activity. They try different kinds of fitness work like running, stretching, and strength games, and start to connect daily habits to feeling good and having energy.

  • How will students be ready for PE next year?

    By spring, students should move with control in a variety of games, follow rules without constant reminders, and explain one or two ways physical activity helps their body and mood. That sets them up for more complex team play next year.