Anonymous wrote:Here is what I would do. Find a friend with a kid similar age and commit to going swimming with your kids once a week. You do not need to pay for a lesson to get your kid comfortable. It was gonna cost me about $17 for a 30 min lesson when DD was a baby vs $6 entry fee for me to take her myself.
I started swimming lessons when she was 3.5 and comfortable in the water. She started actually swimming then and I was paying for that skill to be learned, not just to splash around.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do it. It's not about them learning how to do the freestyle. They learn to be comfortable with their head getting wet, some water in their ears etc. I started this young with my second and wish I'd started younger with my first.
Also, we loved having swimming lessons during the winter last year because it gave us a regular reason to get out of the house even in crappy weather.
+ 1 - I wish we did with our DD. she still doesn't like getting her face wet (7.5). we've spent a fortune on swimming lessons over the last 3 years. she refuses to go under or get more than a splash onto her face.
Anonymous wrote:IDK, I personally felt like those early classes weren't doing anything I couldn't do myself. If this gets you into the water every week with him then yeah, but if you'd take him to the pool anyway then I don't think it's worth the cost.
At 3 my daughter started in a class where I didn't have to get in the water with her and I think that's when they started being really valuable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here is what I would do. Find a friend with a kid similar age and commit to going swimming with your kids once a week. You do not need to pay for a lesson to get your kid comfortable. It was gonna cost me about $17 for a 30 min lesson when DD was a baby vs $6 entry fee for me to take her myself.
I started swimming lessons when she was 3.5 and comfortable in the water. She started actually swimming then and I was paying for that skill to be learned, not just to splash around.
This. Regular pool visits are more important than “lessons” unless you’re doing ISR.
True! But if you find it hard to motivate yourself, you can continue with classes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here is what I would do. Find a friend with a kid similar age and commit to going swimming with your kids once a week. You do not need to pay for a lesson to get your kid comfortable. It was gonna cost me about $17 for a 30 min lesson when DD was a baby vs $6 entry fee for me to take her myself.
I started swimming lessons when she was 3.5 and comfortable in the water. She started actually swimming then and I was paying for that skill to be learned, not just to splash around.
This. Regular pool visits are more important than “lessons” unless you’re doing ISR.
Anonymous wrote:Here is what I would do. Find a friend with a kid similar age and commit to going swimming with your kids once a week. You do not need to pay for a lesson to get your kid comfortable. It was gonna cost me about $17 for a 30 min lesson when DD was a baby vs $6 entry fee for me to take her myself.
I started swimming lessons when she was 3.5 and comfortable in the water. She started actually swimming then and I was paying for that skill to be learned, not just to splash around.
Anonymous wrote:Do it. It's not about them learning how to do the freestyle. They learn to be comfortable with their head getting wet, some water in their ears etc. I started this young with my second and wish I'd started younger with my first.
Also, we loved having swimming lessons during the winter last year because it gave us a regular reason to get out of the house even in crappy weather.