Anonymous wrote:Swim Team is the worst. At least at the club where I am. Taught by 15 yo who are rude and mean to little kids and make them cry. I mean, the coaches are kids themselves so...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Swim Team is the worst. At least at the club where I am. Taught by 15 yo who are rude and mean to little kids and make them cry. I mean, the coaches are kids themselves so...
Our club is the polar opposite. Sorry to hear that there are clubs like that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Swim Team is the worst. At least at the club where I am. Taught by 15 yo who are rude and mean to little kids and make them cry. I mean, the coaches are kids themselves so...
You should switch pools. A lot of our assistant coaches are teens and even tween for pre team, but my kids love them - they cheer extra for them in meets and treat them like rock stars (and we use them as babysitters lol). There are great sw communities out there, so keep looking!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you can afford it, get your child one-on-one lessons with an instructor at your summer pool. At ours, there are always lots of college kids who teach just in the summer. That worked very well in the early years when my child needed more detailed instruction (she's now a club swimmer and loves it!)
Good luck! And more importantly, have fun!
+1 at our pool, the high school-aged assistant coaches work giving private lessons on the side. Ask your junior or senior coaches for leads.
Anonymous wrote:Swim Team is the worst. At least at the club where I am. Taught by 15 yo who are rude and mean to little kids and make them cry. I mean, the coaches are kids themselves so...
Anonymous wrote:Swim Team is the worst. At least at the club where I am. Taught by 15 yo who are rude and mean to little kids and make them cry. I mean, the coaches are kids themselves so...
Anonymous wrote:If you can afford it, get your child one-on-one lessons with an instructor at your summer pool. At ours, there are always lots of college kids who teach just in the summer. That worked very well in the early years when my child needed more detailed instruction (she's now a club swimmer and loves it!)
Good luck! And more importantly, have fun!