PE and Sport

A basketball lesson with Year 5 and Year 6

Growing healthy bodies, loving hearts and inquisitive minds

Physical activity is vital in children’s all-round development, enabling them to pursue happy, healthy and active lives. Gross and fine motor experiences develop incrementally throughout early childhood, starting with sensory explorations and the development of a child’s strength, co-ordination and positional awareness through tummy time, crawling and play movement with both objects and adults. By creating games and providing opportunities for play both indoors and outdoors, adults can support children to develop their core strength, stability, balance, spatial awareness, co-ordination and agility. 

Refining children's hand to eye coordination that is essential for sports.

In addition to gross motor development involving large movements such as climbing, running, dancing etc, our curriculum also develops fine motor skills. This involves small muscles working with the brain and nervous system to control movements in areas such as the hands, fingers, lips, tongue and eyes. 

Fine motor control and precision helps with hand-eye co-ordination, which is later linked to early literacy. Repeated and varied opportunities to explore and play with small world activities, puzzles, arts and crafts and the practice of using small tools, with feedback and support from adults, allow children to develop proficiency, control and confidence.  

Fine motor skills, combined with hand to eye coordination are essential for sports.

Outdoor adventurous pursuits include residential trips

As children get older they learn a range of sports including hockey, football, basketball, netball, tennis, cricket and rounders. Children also have swimming, gymnastics, dance and athletic lessons and take part in a range of competitive games. We take all our children to outdoor centres where they can engage in challenging outdoor adventurous activities. This year our children will be linking up with Finchingfield St John the Baptist Primary Academy on a joint residential to Mersea and Danbury.

Danbury outdoor centre is an purpose-built site, set in over seventy acres of stunning woodland in the heart of the county near Chelmsford. It offers outdfoor adventurous activities including bushcraft, kayaking, climbing, caving and orienteering. Mersea offers the children an opportunity to camp outdoor under canvas as well activities such as high ropes, low ropes, team challenges, climbing and pedal karts. 

Forest School at Finchingfield St John the Baptist supports play, risk taking, resilience and outdoor physical activity.

We are delighted that Forest School is now part of our physical education program. It is a long-term program that supports play, exploration and supported risk taking. It develops confidence and self-esteem through learner inspired, hands-on experiences in a natural setting.

Forest School has a developmental ethos shared by thousands of trained practitioners around the world. Its roots reach back to the open-air culture in Scandinavia where Forest School began. It arrived in the UK in 1993 and has grown from strength to strength since then. 

Finchingfield St John the Baptist now has its own dedicated woodland area just a short walk from the school and is a welcome additional to our core educational offer.

Annual Sports Grant Statement

FIN Sports Grant Strategy 2023-24.docx.pdf