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Section 1: Polestar Principles & Philosophy (10 Questions)
Q1: According to Polestar's four pillars, which principle emphasizes that all movement
should initiate from the center and radiate outward to the extremities?
A. Whole body movement
B. Breathing
C. Axial elongation and core control
D. Movement integration [CORRECT]
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Movement integration is the Polestar principle that movement initiates from
the center (core) and flows outward to the extremities; this ensures proximal stability
before distal mobility and creates efficient, coordinated movement patterns.
Q2: During the Mat Hundred exercise, the ideal Polestar breathing pattern is:
A. Apical breathing with inhalation on each pump
B. Lateral thoracic breathing with five short exhalations during each pump phase
[CORRECT]
C. Paradoxical breathing with inhalation during abdominal contraction
D. Complete breath holding to maximize core stability
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Polestar teaches lateral thoracic breathing with the exhale synchronized to
the arm pump; this maintains deep core engagement through transversus abdominis
activation without creating upper trapezius tension from apical breathing.
Q3: The Polestar principle of "whole body movement" means that:
A. Every exercise must involve all four limbs simultaneously
,B. No joint moves in isolation; movement in one segment affects the entire kinetic chain
[CORRECT]
C. The head and neck should remain completely still during all exercises
D. Only the spine should move while limbs stay fixed
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Whole body movement recognizes that the body functions as an integrated
system; movement or restriction in one area creates compensatory patterns elsewhere,
so exercises are designed to address global coordination.
Q4: In Polestar methodology, "integrative isometrics" refers to:
A. Holding every position statically for 60 seconds
B. Maintaining a low-level sustained contraction of stabilizing muscles while movement
occurs at other joints [CORRECT]
C. Isolating one muscle group at a time with maximal contraction
D. Relaxing all muscles completely between repetitions
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Integrative isometrics involves sustained activation of deep stabilizers (TVA,
pelvic floor, multifidus) while prime movers perform dynamic movement; this creates
stability during mobility rather than static holds alone.
Q5: Which statement BEST describes the Polestar approach to neutral spine versus
imprint?
A. Imprint is always superior for core engagement
B. Neutral spine is the functional ideal; imprint is used as a regression or when lumbar
stability cannot be maintained in neutral [CORRECT]
C. Neutral spine is only for advanced clients
D. Imprint should be used for all supine exercises regardless of client ability
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Polestar prioritizes neutral spine as the functional position for daily life and
athletic performance; imprint is taught as a tool to help clients initially find core control
when they cannot stabilize the lumbar spine in neutral.
, Q6: The "axial elongation" principle in Polestar Pilates is BEST defined as:
A. Creating maximum spinal flexion in every exercise
B. Maintaining length through the spine by opposing forces of gravity and ground
reaction [CORRECT]
C. Arching the back as much as possible
D. Compressing the vertebrae together for stability
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Axial elongation creates space between vertebrae through oppositional
energy (crown of head reaching up, sit bones reaching down); this reduces compression
and promotes optimal alignment during movement.
Q7: According to Polestar, the primary role of the diaphragm during Pilates exercises is
to:
A. Remain completely inactive to isolate the abdominals
B. Function as both a respiratory muscle and a postural stabilizer working
synergistically with the pelvic floor and TVA [CORRECT]
C. Create maximal inhalation only at rest
D. Push the abdominal wall outward forcefully
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Polestar teaches diaphragmatic integration where the diaphragm descends
during inhalation while the TVA maintains tension; on exhalation, the diaphragm
ascends as the pelvic floor and TVA engage, creating 360-degree core stability.
Q8: Joseph Pilates originally called his method:
A. "Core Power Training"
B. "Contrology" [CORRECT]
C. "Spinal Alignment Therapy"
D. "Dynamic Stretching System"
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Joseph Pilates originally named his system "Contrology," emphasizing the
mind's control over the muscles; the term "Pilates" was adopted after his death.
Q9: In Polestar, the concept of "proximal stability for distal mobility" means: