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Combining practical sport performance with the study of the science, psychology, and social factors behind physical activity.

A Level

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Physical Education

Quick Summary

Theory meets practice – Combines scientific study (anatomy, psychology, biomechanics) with practical performance assessment

Sporting performance required – You'll be assessed performing in one sport at a competitive standard

Analysis and application – Learn to analyse movement, training methods, and apply sports science to real-world scenarios

What's it actually like?

IN A NUTSHELL

A-Level Physical Education combines theoretical study with practical performance. You'll study anatomy and physiology (how the body works during exercise), biomechanics (movement analysis), sports psychology (motivation, anxiety, learning skills), and socio-cultural issues (sport and society, commercialisation, ethics).

You'll also be assessed performing in one sport (as a player/performer or coach) and complete coursework analysing performance. The theory is scientific – expect biology-style content about muscles, energy systems, and oxygen transport.

Exams are written papers testing your knowledge of sport science. Practical assessment involves being recorded performing your chosen sport.

You'll be assessed performing in ONE sport of your choice, either as:

Player/performer – performing skills in competitive situations
Coach – coaching others and demonstrating coaching ability.You'll be recorded and assessed on technique, tactics, and performance level. You need to perform at a good standard – ideally competing at school, club, or county level.

Student Studying

Biology helps enormously: The anatomy and physiology content overlaps significantly with Biology. If you're also taking Biology, the content will reinforce each other.

About the course

Is this for you?

  • Anatomy & Physiology

    You will study how the body works during exercise. This includes the heart, lungs, muscles, skeleton, and how the body responds and adapts to physical activity and training.


    Sport Psychology

    You will learn how the mind affects performance. This includes motivation, stress, confidence, aggression, skill learning, and how athletes improve and perform under pressure.


    Socio-Cultural Issues in Sport

    You will study the role of sport in society. This includes topics such as ethics, drugs in sport, media influence, sponsorship, participation, and how sport affects different groups in society.


    Practical Performance & Assessment

    You will be assessed in one sport as a performer or coach, and also sit written exams. The course combines practical ability with scientific and written study.

  • Physical Education is a good fit if you:


    • Are passionate about sport and physical activity

    • Perform at a good standard in at least one sport (ideally competing regularly)

    • Are interested in the science behind sport and exercise

    • Enjoy both practical performance and academic study

    • Don't mind that PE is more scientific than GCSE PE

    • Can handle biology-style content about the human body

    • Are interested in sports psychology, coaching, or sports science

    • Want to understand how the body and mind work during sport


  • Sports science knowledge - Understanding anatomy, physiology, biomechanics, and psychology of sport.

    Performance analyis - Analysing sporting performance scientifically and identifying areas for improvement.

    Scientific literacy - Understanding research, data, and scientific principles related to exercise and sport.

    Practical performance - Continuing to develop your skills in your chosen sport.

    Written communication - Writing essays and extended answers about sport science topics.

    Understanding motivation and psychology - Learning what drives performance and how to optimise mental preparation.

  • You need strong sporting ability: You can't just be interested in sport – you need to perform well in at least one sport. If you're not currently competing or training regularly, you may struggle with the practical component.


    It's much more scientific than GCSE: A-Level PE involves detailed study of muscles, bones, energy systems, gas exchange, and biomechanics. If you didn't enjoy the science in GCSE Biology, you might find this challenging.


    There's significant content to learn: Anatomy, physiology, psychology, and sociology of sport means lots of content across different areas. It's more content-heavy than many people expect.


    Theory vs practice split: Only 30% is practical. If you're hoping to spend most of your time playing sport, this isn't the right course – it's predominantly academic.


    Some universities don't rate it highly: Very competitive universities sometimes see PE as less rigorous than traditional sciences. If you're aiming for academic courses at top universities, combine PE with strong academic subjects.


    Injury can impact grades: If you're injured during the assessment period and can't perform, this can affect your practical marks. Have a backup plan.

  • PE + Biology + Psychology = For sports science or physiotherapy
    PE + Biology + Chemistry = For sports therapy or medicine
    PE + Psychology + Sociology = For sports psychology or coaching
    PE + Business + Psychology = For sports management

  • PE rewards understanding the science and performing well practically. Here's how to succeed:


    Link theory to practice constantly – Connect what you learn about muscles, energy systems, or psychology to your own sport. Real examples from your performance make theory stick.


    Maintain your sporting performance – Keep training and competing in your chosen sport. Your practical performance contributes significantly to your grade. Don't let it slide.


    Analyse performances scientifically – When watching sport or your own performance, think about biomechanics, tactics, psychology. Apply your theoretical knowledge to real situations.


    Master the anatomy and physiology – Use diagrams, models, and active recall to learn muscles, bones, and systems. This foundational knowledge underpins everything else.

  • PE graduates can go on to work as:

    • PE teachers

    • sports coaches

    • physiotherapists

    • sports scientists

    • fitness instructors

    • personal trainers

    • sports psychologists

    • strength and conditioning coaches

    • sports development and sports management.

  • Physical Education is valued by universities. It develops understanding of the science behind sport, health and human performance.


    Physical Education A-Level opens doors to degrees in:


    • Sports Science

    • Physical Education

    • Sports Coaching

    • Sports Therapy

    • Physiotherapy

    • Exercise and Health Sciences

    • Sports Management


    Top tip: PE A-Level combines theory with practical skills - it's more

  • Ask yourself:


    • Do I perform at a good standard in at least one sport?

    • Am I interested in the science behind sport and exercise?

    • Am I comfortable with biology-style content about the human body?

    • Can I handle a mix of academic study and practical performance?

    • Do I want to work in sport, coaching, or sports science?

    • Am I willing to continue training and competing whilst studying?

    If you're answering yes to most of these, PE could be perfect for you.

Transferable skills: Understanding human performance, motivation, and teamwork is valuable beyond sport.

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Common A Level combinations

This A Level pairs well with:

Politics
Sociology
Modern Languages
Politics
Philosophy
Drama & Theatre
Sciences (to keep STEM options open)
Psychology
Maths

Popular A Level combinations

PE + Biology + Psychology = For sports science or physiotherapy
PE + Biology + Chemistry = For sports therapy or medicine
PE + Psychology + Sociology = For sports psychology or coaching
PE + Business + Psychology = For sports management

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