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NCHPAD - Building Healthy Inclusive Communities

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Definitions of Key Concepts and Principles


  • Repetitions: One complete movement of an exercise or lift.
  • Sets: A group of repetitions performed continuously.
  • Rest period: Recovery periods can be between sets, between exercises or between training sessions.
  • The overall principle is the longer the better. The most common recommendation is rest between sets for the length of time it took you to complete one set.

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