300m Run (Cooper): Females, Age 30-39

The 300-metre run measures anaerobic power and speed endurance by timing a maximal-effort sprint over a short distance. Data are from Physical Fitness Assessments and Norms for Adults and Law Enforcement (Cooper Institute, Dallas TX, 2013), a reference library of about ten fitness test norm charts. The 300m run norm chart in that monograph is labelled as drawn from Law Enforcement Studies data. Because the source population is law enforcement candidates (likely fitter than the general public), these norms may be faster than population-wide averages. Note: this source is an institutional monograph with no DOI and undisclosed sample sizes; it is the only publication providing full percentile tables by age and sex for this test. Female norms are only available up to age 49; the 50+ brackets were not included in the published tables.

300m Run (Cooper) Cardiovascular Females 30-39

Percentile Distribution (sec)

Percentile distribution (sec) 5th 5th: 114 sec 114 25th 25th: 85.50 sec 85.50 50th 50th: 74 sec 74 75th 75th: 66.50 sec 66.50 95th 95th: 56.50 sec 56.50 0 28 56 84 112 140 sec Percentile distribution (sec) 5th 5th: 114 sec 114 25th 25th: 85.50 sec 85.50 50th 50th: 74 sec 74 75th 75th: 66.50 sec 66.50 95th 95th: 56.50 sec 56.50 0 28 56 84 112 140 sec
Percentile Value (sec) Rating
5th 114 Excellent
25th 85.5 Above average
50th 74 Average
75th 66.5 Below average
95th 56.5 Poor

What these numbers mean for females aged 30-39

A score around 74 sec is typical (50th percentile) for females in this age group. Times below about 66.5 sec fall near the 75th percentile or higher, indicating above-average performance (faster is better). Times above about 85.5 sec fall near the 25th percentile; about 75% of the reference population performed faster.

Percentiles show how common a value is, not whether it is healthy.

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Other age brackets
Males data Males, 30-39
Age trend

Related Metrics

Cooper Institute Fitness Norms

This test is one of about ten norm charts in the Cooper Institute's 2013 monograph. Law enforcement academies pick five to six of these tests to build their own field batteries.