Anonymous wrote:My child goes to local public, but heard about a one day lifeguarding class that was being offered by a group of private school coaches at Kenwood.
Our kid did all the online work and attended the class. He was home by 12:30 that day and said he passed. He was at the pool less than 5 hours. But sure enough, he received his Red Cross certification card a week or two after.
Shortly after that, he received an email from the Red Cross quality assurance team asking for a phone call over some questions regarding the class. They spoke and it became very clear that the training did not cover all the material.
We are still waiting on a formal notice from the Red Cross about the certification. Crickets from those who ran the bogus class.
These private school coaches charged my kid $400 for the class. Most of the kids were from the independent schools. What’s up with this scam… do these schools allow teachers/coaches to solicit their students to sign up for their classes outside of school? Seems even more egregious when they are telling the kids they are certified for life saving when they clearly haven’t done the full curriculum.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Demand a refund. If they don’t, take them to court. I did a Lifeguard course back in the day and there’s no way you can learn and then successfully execute everything in one day.
I do wonder though, like you know you have different levels of cpr training, I had health worker cpr which was super intense now I’m in a different environment I still do cpr every 2 years but I different Version and not so thorough imo.
So I’m wondering if this day Lifeguard class technically is that, but it’s not actually to the level where he can get hired anywhere. It’s more like life guard for your backyard pool peace of mind or something…
It’s the full certification card. Other kids from that class got hired at some local pools already this summer with it.
Anonymous wrote:My child goes to local public, but heard about a one day lifeguarding class that was being offered by a group of private school coaches at Kenwood.
Our kid did all the online work and attended the class. He was home by 12:30 that day and said he passed. He was at the pool less than 5 hours. But sure enough, he received his Red Cross certification card a week or two after.
Shortly after that, he received an email from the Red Cross quality assurance team asking for a phone call over some questions regarding the class. They spoke and it became very clear that the training did not cover all the material.
We are still waiting on a formal notice from the Red Cross about the certification. Crickets from those who ran the bogus class.
These private school coaches charged my kid $400 for the class. Most of the kids were from the independent schools. What’s up with this scam… do these schools allow teachers/coaches to solicit their students to sign up for their classes outside of school? Seems even more egregious when they are telling the kids they are certified for life saving when they clearly haven’t done the full curriculum.
Anonymous wrote:Is there a link online to Red Cross swimming certifications and their requirements ? somehow I could not find one…
Anonymous wrote:The Washington Post had a story last year about "rogue" lifeguard instructors like this.
This should be a gift link to the article.
https://wapo.st/3yLLxli
Anonymous wrote:Demand a refund. If they don’t, take them to court. I did a Lifeguard course back in the day and there’s no way you can learn and then successfully execute everything in one day.
I do wonder though, like you know you have different levels of cpr training, I had health worker cpr which was super intense now I’m in a different environment I still do cpr every 2 years but I different Version and not so thorough imo.
So I’m wondering if this day Lifeguard class technically is that, but it’s not actually to the level where he can get hired anywhere. It’s more like life guard for your backyard pool peace of mind or something…