Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have your kid start a team at the school.
Bwhahahah sure have a teen start a club at a school that I’m assuming has no pool. Good luck having Junior find pool space, insurance, coaches, let alone other kids who want to swim. This is the most ridiculous suggestion. This isn’t a chess club.
A kid did this at St. Andrew's. Sure it's a lot of work, but with enthusiasm it can be done.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have your kid start a team at the school.
Bwhahahah sure have a teen start a club at a school that I’m assuming has no pool. Good luck having Junior find pool space, insurance, coaches, let alone other kids who want to swim. This is the most ridiculous suggestion. This isn’t a chess club.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have your kid start a team at the school.
Bwhahahah sure have a teen start a club at a school that I’m assuming has no pool. Good luck having Junior find pool space, insurance, coaches, let alone other kids who want to swim. This is the most ridiculous suggestion. This isn’t a chess club.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One of the private schools we’re interesting in applying to doesn’t have a swim team
Can they swim for another high school during the winter season? I don’t think the admissions officer will have the answer to this lol
No. But in many ways this is a gift, really - they can just continue to swim for their club team and won't have to deal with the conflict/time burden of the bother of HS swim since it's not even an option. In theory, this would free up some time for a different activity or focus on studies. Your child may not appreciate it but you should consider this situation as an unintended "gift".
OP here- didn’t think about it that way, thanks. Doesn’t matter for recruiting, right? Don’t know yet if that’s in the cards but don’t want to cut it off, either. Kid is strong club swimmer
Anonymous wrote:Have your kid start a team at the school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One of the private schools we’re interesting in applying to doesn’t have a swim team
Can they swim for another high school during the winter season? I don’t think the admissions officer will have the answer to this lol
No. But in many ways this is a gift, really - they can just continue to swim for their club team and won't have to deal with the conflict/time burden of the bother of HS swim since it's not even an option. In theory, this would free up some time for a different activity or focus on studies. Your child may not appreciate it but you should consider this situation as an unintended "gift".
Anonymous wrote:One of the private schools we’re interesting in applying to doesn’t have a swim team
Can they swim for another high school during the winter season? I don’t think the admissions officer will have the answer to this lol