The new Leaving Certificate Physical Education (LCPE) specification feels like a really exciting step forward in how our students experience PE in school. While plenty of the familiar topics and activities remain, the updated structure brings a fresh way of thinking. The outcomes give more details and feel more connected to how students learn, move, and understand their involvement in sport and physical activities.
The Physical Education Project (PEP)
At the heart of the new LCPE is the Physical Education Project (PEP) and, rather than seeing it as something to worry about, I see it as an opportunity. Each year’s brief will bring a new theme and core concept(s), give a fresh angle on the subject and keep the work both practical and relevant.
Students use their own movement, training and experiences as the starting point for understanding the concepts behind what they do. It will make their learning feel real, personal and connected. As someone who sees students trying their best on pitches, in the PE hall, in gyms and in the classroom every day, this feels like the most natural and authentic approach they can receive.
Variety of Physical Activities
Students will still enjoy the variety of physical activities you would expect – building skills, developing techniques and improving their performance – but are also encouraged to understand the ‘why’ behind what they do. Through their activity, they will start exploring skill acquisition, the cardiovascular and respiratory systems, bones and muscles, biomechanics, psychology, and how physical activity supports lifelong health and well-being.
One of the parts I love most about the new specification is how students get to investigate their own movement. They record, analyse, reflect, question and make sense of what they’re doing. This, for me, is the real learning – when we can see their confidence and curiosity grow as they realise they can apply the theory they are learning to things they experience every day.
Physical Literacy, Wellbeing and Lifelong Engagement
The new specification values physical literacy, lifelong participation and well-being. More than ever, our students understand the link between activity, stress, mental health, sleep and resilience. LCPE gives students the space to think about these connections and to see themselves as active, informed movers.
Like every subject, PE isn’t just about learning content – it’s about learning through experience. The new LCPE really embraces this. Students get hands-on learning where they ask questions, observe patterns, test ideas and evaluate information as they move.
Practical Support for Teachers Navigating the New Specification
As teachers, we have the opportunity to design lessons that feel meaningful, active and personal; learning experiences where students make connections between theory and practice right in front of us.
To help everyone settle into the new specification, Hilary Fitzgerald and I created the New Winning Formula LCPE textbook along with a Project and Exam Handbook.
These resources were designed carefully with teachers and students in mind. The Teacher’s Resource Book is full of planning tools, clear explanations, practical activities, worksheets, tests and ideas you can use straight away in the classroom and in your practical classes.
Our goal was simple: ‘to make the new LCPE specification accessible, enjoyable, and confidence-building for students and teachers!’