Stage 1 — Planning
Project brief
Learners must produce evidence of planning for a 12-week practical case study
which will include:
- Introduction : This should be a brief overview of the project, providing correct interpretation and
understanding of the practical case study. This includes the requirements of the
project and the need to acquire negotiated access to a client while ensuring client
confidentiality.
TIP : interpreting involves analyzing and making sense of the information provided in the description from your client. It involves drawing conclusions, making connections, and offering insights into the meaning or significance of the information.
- Client selection : The learner should provide information concerning client selection (how and why they
were selected). Information concerning client/ learner negotiated access should be
identified, and the client’s background information should be summarised from the
meeting/health screening session (documented via health, nutritional and lifestyle
evaluation toolsets).
- Overall aim : This will be a general statement of the overall aims (maximum of two) of the practical
case study. This overall aim is based on the agreed actions discussed between the
learner and the client.
- Objectives : Learners should identify a minimum of three objectives. The objectives should be
task focused and allow completion of the overall research aim. The objectives
identified should be SMART and allow the learner to plan for the completion of the
whole project.
- Research approaches : There are a variety of research methods that learners may use. However, these fall
into two main categories:
- qualitative research (eg interpreting client’s goals at interview/ screening session)
- quantitative research (using numerical information including recorded
anthropometrical and fitness statistics)
Data gathered for the project may also come from primary sources, eg learner/client
lifestyle questionnaires, client interviews and from secondary sources, eg research
papers/ academic journals on recommended physical activity levels, government
papers, nutritional recommendations and normative data from population studies
(Norm tables for health and fitness test comparisons). Also, justification should be
given for each selected approach (triangulation of research methods).
- Ethical and legal considerations : Identified a minimum of three potential ethical and/or legal considerations involved
in the project. This should be justified with inclusion as to why these issues may
impact upon the project. These fall into two main categories:
[1] research involving the treatment and welfare of humans
[2] legal matters pertaining to the use of gathered information.
- Overview of an action plan :
- This provides an overview of the proposed action plan to allow the objectives to
be achieved. This should include a clear plan of action with effective timescales
of each stage and inclusion of daily and weekly scheduling for the full project.
- Learners will also have to identify a minimum of five resources and/or information
sources required to complete the project. This should be predicted for the whole
project with the inclusion of human (eg assessor, client, peers), physical
(eg fitness testing equipment and exercise equipment) and desktop sources
(eg e-books, e-journals, books).
- Identification of any foreseeable and potential barriers to completing the practical
case study with identification of contingency plans or measures that could be put
into operation.
- Conclusion: Learners should identify areas for personal development (minimum of three) that
may be improved because of undertaking the practical case study (eg developing
interpersonal skills, developing time management skills).
- References/bibliography : References and bibliography section should be appropriately referenced in a style
that reflects the academic level of this case study. While a minimum amount of seven
references is specified, the references should be at the amount that would enable
learners to plan for the development stage and effective intervention methods.
Last modified: Friday, 10 January 2025, 10:20 AM