We've done both Kids First and Goldfish. They felt basically the same to us. But after sending each of our kids there two years in a row we really felt like the benefit was getting the kids used to being in the water.
The classes would typically have 4-5 in an age group with one instructor, and the kids take turns with the instructor - so a lot of time is just sitting on the sides of the pool. |
I can tell you’re the same poster because you don’t use capital letters. Just because your child was able to, it doesn’t mean ALL children will be able to. I posted swim lessons were essential for MY CHILD and that is my opinion. Please stop telling me otherwise. I don’t care what division your team was. I have an older child who swam JOs AFTER she took swim lessons. I am not an inexperienced swim parent. Many toddlers and young children are fearful of the water. |
Oh. I guess I didn’t realize rec center lessons were free. |
We originally planned to do lessons through the Rec center (which is what I did as a kid) but the scheduling was horrible. Very few slots that worked with our schedule and they basically all filled up on within an hour of becoming available. Then you have to go through the same crazy registration process all over again a few weeks later. That's how we ended up at Goldfish. |
They were both in swim force by 6, so I'd say 2.5 to 3 years to progress through all the levels? That's with weekly lessons and no supplementation by us. We didn't belong to a pool at the time, so there was no outdoor swimming in the summer. |
Same experience with Rec lessons. It’s not much more to use a swim school and so worth it. Rec lessons tend to be large, fill up crazy fast and are in big, cold pools often taught by teenagers. |
Worth it IMO. My four-year-old no swimmer made it through Swim Force by 6 and a half and left to do summer swim and club swim. |
I love Goldfish. has been well worth the money for our family (3 kids) |
My daughter started weekly classes at Kids First when she was five. About a year and a half later, she'd only moved up two levels. They kept saying she needed to "perfect her kick" before they'd move on to the levels that taught strokes. When I realized that she couldn't even tread water, we switched to Goldfish. Within 3 months, she was treading water and able to freestyle 50 yards. By the time we left Goldfish two years later, she was in the swim force class and knew all of the strokes.
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Goldfish was wonderful with my DD. She passed all the levels and is a great swimmer thanks to their staff. The swim instructors make it fun, which keeps the kids engaged. |
Highly recommend Goldfish. Our kids have been doing for years and people are shocked when they see our children in and around water. Worth the $$ |
not OP, now you make me wonder should I sign up my almost 6 year old that can't get his head in the face at all. He can't get his face wet when I wash his hair, and that is his level 0. We tried a bit of swimming before panademic at rec center, and he was not willing to go. How much is Goldfish a month? And, is he too old to join more younger kids at level 0 level? |
I saw two kids who had to be around 10 in the class that's just above the infant/toddler class. I don't think there's a cutoff. We haven't been in two years, but it was around $100 a month for classes once a week. |
Not at all too old. The classes are divided by age so he’d be in gliders 1 which is ages 5 and up. |
This. |