Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Since she's shown a willingness to swim in the past, and she's only 4, I'd sign her up and make her go.
You must not have stubborn kids. I signed up my kid and she never got in the water. What would you do..throw her in?
Anonymous wrote:Push her into it. I
I know someone who lost a 5 year old child to a backyard pool drowning.
It happens.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agreed with pushing the child to take the swim lessons. Had the same issue with DS after he took a break from swimming when the pandemic first started. Was miserable for a few months until we got back into a routine (and still not DS's favorite thing). On top of that, we had bad experiences with some teachers. Thus, one piece of advice is to try to pick your teacher carefully and switch if you need to. Having a bad teacher set us back and made things even worse. That being said, a routine is important and makes things more palatable. Thus, don't switch just because things are not absolutely perfect.
I'm curious if your kid has actually learned to swim from this approach?
My kids didn't do swim lessons, we just played and had fun and they both swam well before their fourth birthdays. I've never known a kid who learned from something that needed to be forced like that. Miserable kids don't learn.
I agree that swimming is an important life skill, but OP's option of taking her kid to the pool seems far more likely to end up with a kid who can swim well enough to join a summer pre-team, or keep practicing at camp or whatever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Since she's shown a willingness to swim in the past, and she's only 4, I'd sign her up and make her go.
You must not have stubborn kids. I signed up my kid and she never got in the water. What would you do..throw her in?
Anonymous wrote:Since she's shown a willingness to swim in the past, and she's only 4, I'd sign her up and make her go.
Anonymous wrote:She took weekly swim lessons last summer and fall. We stopped for the winter as her baby sister was born in Jan and we wanted to reduce exposure. Now she’s saying she doesn’t want to restart in the spring/summer. Should I make her go, or hold off until she wants to? We do have access to a community pool about 15 min away that we could take her to a couple times a week.
Anonymous wrote:Agreed with pushing the child to take the swim lessons. Had the same issue with DS after he took a break from swimming when the pandemic first started. Was miserable for a few months until we got back into a routine (and still not DS's favorite thing). On top of that, we had bad experiences with some teachers. Thus, one piece of advice is to try to pick your teacher carefully and switch if you need to. Having a bad teacher set us back and made things even worse. That being said, a routine is important and makes things more palatable. Thus, don't switch just because things are not absolutely perfect.