Learning to Swim: Deciding on Lessons

When I signed MaM up for swimming lessons last year, I shopped by price, location, and availability. We settled on the pool closest to our house, which happened to have reasonably priced lessons at a time we could commit to. With all of the choices out there, here are a few factors to consider when signing your child up for swimming lessons:

Inside v. Outside: One thing I did not foresee last summer- at least one thunderstorm per week in the month of July. Her three week session got extended to six, and they just squeezed in the last lessons the week before school started. This year, MaM is taking her lessons inside at the Fort Ben YMCA. Weather, except for lightning/tornado warnings, is not an issue.

Time of Day: I knew we’d have to do lessons this year on non-day camp days. There was no way I was going to attempt to get someplace in the evening on a regular basis on my two work days each week. We ended up choosing lessons around noontime. A friend of mine learned the hard way the morning swim lessons in June may not be the way to go- the water for the parent/child class was COLD at 9am!

Something to keep in mind: Distractions. Last summer, the outdoor pool was closed except for the class being taught. This summer, MaM’s lessons are happening next to another group lesson, a water aerobics class and an open swim. There’s a lap pool across the way, and there’s music on the entire time. She doesn’t seem to mind, but for some kids, that might be too much stimuli.

Size of Group: Most places offer group lessons, semi-private, and private lessons. Group lessons are the most common, and many kids are served well by the positive peer pressure presented in a group lesson format. Your child may not try tread water for 30 seconds with you, but with a few friends, motivated by an instructor, it could totally happen. The YMCA keeps a ratio of 1:5 for kids ages 3-5, and aims for 1:8 in the 6-12 age group. Semi-private guarantees a smaller group, and private means it’s 1:1 instruction. I asked Javier Urias, aquatics director at the Fort Ben Y when private lessons might be needed. He said that it will depend on the child, but that some children need more individualized attention. He likened it to hiring a math tutor- sometimes, your child just needs that extra time. (True story: I had private lessons at my hometown Y waaayyy back in the day so I could pass my Girl Scout swim test and swim in the deep water!)

MaM is halfway through her four week course, and is having a great time. Today she swam across our neighborhood pool, which just wowed me. It’s amazing how fast kids pick things up with some practice!

Disclosure: This is the third in a series of posts about the program offerings through the  Greater Indianapolis YMCA. MaM is being provided swimming lessons in exchange for these posts.

 

 

Learning to Swim: Jumping in Feet First

As I mentioned last week, this week I’m jumping into the aquatics programs offered by the YMCA of Greater Indianapolis. I don’t know about you, but it’s a combination of YMCA & Girl Scout camp that taught me how to swim back in the day.

While I learned how to swim myself, I wasn’t sure what to do when it came to instructing my own children (ignore the fact that I am a teacher, married to a lifeguard, ok?) on how to swim. We’ve always swam each summer, and enjoy hotel pools when we can, but how, exactly, were we supposed to teach our kids to swim? What’s the definition of knowing how to swim? Doing the front crawl? The deadman’s float? Treading water?

In my conversations with Javier Urias, Aquatics Director for the Ft. Benjamin Harrison YMCA, he answered these questions and many more (his answers are in italics).

What’s a good age to start swimming lessons? The earlier, the better!

The YMCA (and many other swimming programs around town) offer parent/child classes for children as young as 6 months old. The sooner your child is comfortable in the water, the better. Parents are required to be in the water for the 0-3 classes. When parents are there for the early lessons, it makes the separation easier when your child is old enough for the peer classes.

Once your child is in a peer class (no parent participation required)– what do you do as a parent?

This is a direct quote from Javier made me laugh out loud: “As an instructor I don’t mind if the parent sticks around and watches from a distance at any level. They must be in the water with the children in the parent child classes which are for children 6mos -3yrs. It’s when parents try “help out” during the class and jump in the water, this can interfere with the Peer grouping/Instructor relationship that we try and develop during our classes. It’s important for children to be in a group of their peers experience swim lessons with their peers.” (Can you imagine??)

Last summer MaM took lessons through the parks department, and the policy there was for parents to sit away from the lessons, and that worked just fine. To be honest, at MaM’s first YMCA lesson this week, we sat a foot away from the pool. Not because she needed me to, but because her younger brother was miffed that he couldn’t jump in with her (friends, it was not pretty- note to self, the boy is ready for swim class).

If given the choice of having 8 swim lessons over the course of 8 weeks (1x per week)  or 4 weeks (2x per week), which model works best for most kids? Does frequency help retention? YES! Frequency does help. Either way works fine but the most important thing to keep in mind is that if the parent is willing to work with the child and come to the pool on the off days to practices what was taught during lessons this helps tremendously. Make sure your instructor gives homework for you and your child to work on in between classes. Extra practice always helps when you are learning a new skill.

I never thought about asking for homework from our swim instructor, but it makes sense. Whether it’s simply getting comfortable leaving the side the pool, a particular part to a stroke or coordinating breathing and arm movements, of course practicing helps. Mam’s lessons are Tuesday/Thursday, so I’m planning to review the skills she’s learning over each weekend.

Thanks to Javier for answering my incessant questions. Next week we’ll be talking about what to look for in group instruction, and when private lessons may be the answer to learning to swim. Have a question or a funny swim lesson story to share? Leave it in the comments!

Disclosure: This is the second in a series of posts about the program offerings through the  Greater Indianapolis YMCA. MaM is being provided swimming lessons in exchange for these posts.

Take Me Out to the Ball Game: A Giveaway

Updated: The comments are now closed! The winner is BNPositive, comment #1 (how often does #1 win? seriously?) Congrats, Jason, and thanks everyone for playing along!!


It’s still Birthday Week here at Casa de Kahuna, and the fox is enjoying each and every one of his presents. It’s hard to say which is his favorite, but something he’s played with every chance he gets is his new Little Tikes TotSports T-Ball Set.

boy ready to hit a ball off of a batting tee
Play Ball!

He woke up Wednesday morning asking, “I play with my baseball toy now?” (unfortunately, we had to leave the house), and it was the first thing he reached for when we did get home that evening. This morning he started batting in his pajamas. It seems we’ve got a baseball fan on our hands.

The first team I ever rooted for was the New York Yankees, and I remember my dad and my uncle loading up the four of us cousins and taking us to Yankee Stadium for games. We had a team yearbook from the early 80s featuring Reggie Jackson, Goose Gossage & Bucky Dent.

When we moved to Indiana, we repeated the ritual, this time with the Cubs. It made sense, since at the time, the American League never met the National League except in the playoffs or local games. We quickly formed an allegiance to Ryne Sanberg, Rick Sutcliffe and manager Jim Frey. As kids, we lived the excitement of the Cubs getting into the pennant race in 1984, and everyone was singing the song, “Go Cubs Go”. Plus, we had the iconic Harry Carey on WGN.  (Did you know I knew a little about baseball?)

Here in Indianapolis, we don’t have a local major league team to root for, and it seems most grown ups root for their childhood favorites. We do, however, have a minor league team that plays at Victory Field, the Indianapolis Indians, and taking in a game is huge fun. We’ve taken the kids once, when the Fox was an infant, but we just haven’t made it to a game these past two summers (such a shame, I know).

We’ve got plans this summer though.

 

 

THE GIVEAWAY

The Kahunas will be attending the Family of Farmers Night at Victory Field on July 19th! Whoo hoo.

Want to join us? (you don’t have to sit by us, honest)

Family of Farmers wants to give one lucky reader up to EIGHT tickets for July 19th’s 7pm game, and will provide the food and the fun for the night. How can you beat that??

To enter, there are three quick things to do: 1) Like Family of Farmers on Facebook (if you’re a facebooker). 2) Follow Family of Farmers on Twitter (if you’re a Tweep) 3) Leave ONE comment, preferably about baseball. What’s your favorite team? Did you play as a kid? Do you get to Victory Field? What’s your Fantasy Baseball team look like?

When you leave your comment, be sure to enter an email (on the form, not the comment itself) where you can be reached. The comments will be open until Tuesday, June 28th at 9pm. I’ll pick a comment via random.org and  notify the winner via email and we’ll take it from there.

Good luck!

P.S. Comment moderation is on, so if you’re new here, welcome, and I’ll be approving comments as fast as I can!