What do you mean my parenting? All of my kids swim. However, you clearly have no idea what life is like for some low income people. Poor people often work evenings and weekends. They may work 6-7 days a week because they’re working multiple part-time jobs or two FT jobs. On demand scheduling means that retail workers may have a different schedule every week, making it impossible to commit to a weekly class at a specific time. |
The logistics of getting to a pool during school hours are not workable. Swim class as a MCPS requirement is also not a good idea in general. We had swimming as an optional part of our public HS PE program only because we had an indoor pool. I don’t think anyone learned anything from it. People are at all different levels, a PE teacher is not usually a good swim teacher, and I would not want to learn how to not drown in this sort of class. |
Swim can only be taught in districts that have schools with pools.
How can you bus high school kids to a pool, have them get changed, get a decent lesson; get changed again; bussed back, all without missing other classes. It just can’t happen. |
How big are learn to swim classes vs a PE class? |
Right. Because learning to use a tampon for the first time isn’t stressful at all. |
Stop using low income as your talking point as this isn't what this is about. Yes, I do. You don't. Our swim team is mostly minorities and lower income with the county. Not all of us live in your bubble. |
In my MCPS ES we were bused to Gaithersburg Middle School's pool once a week for a month or so for swim lessons. I already knew how to swim, so I basically showed the teacher I could swim a lap and spent the rest of the time on the pool deck.
This was in the 1980s. |