Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid got so much more out of 1 on 1 lessons with an amazing instructor (who also coaches special olympics) than a class.
I know but the classes really are good. And they build team community. Plus they’re basically included with the pool membership. I’m really hesitant to pay extra for this.
Really good classes that build team community are useless if your kid won't take the class. Unless he's a particularly obstinate kid, there's a reason he won't do it; you just don't know what it is (and it's probably some kid-logic that wouldn't make sense to anyone else). I really disagree with the advice to just let him sit next to you all summer if need be. What a waste. Seems like cutting off your nose to spite your face. Maybe try the bribe, but I think that if you 1) have a mechanism to teach him how to swim (1:1, and only assuming you can afford it); and 2) you want him to learn how to swim, then 3) you should use the mechanism you have, rather than insist that your kid really ought to be fine with something he's clearly not fine with.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid got so much more out of 1 on 1 lessons with an amazing instructor (who also coaches special olympics) than a class.
I know but the classes really are good. And they build team community. Plus they’re basically included with the pool membership. I’m really hesitant to pay extra for this.
Anonymous wrote:My kid got so much more out of 1 on 1 lessons with an amazing instructor (who also coaches special olympics) than a class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd ask the teacher what he/she recommends. Reluctance towards swimming lessons is so common - they may have suggestions on what to do.
She offered to teach him 1:1 which he LOVES. But the class is a fraction of the cost, and it’s about forming community and making friends. And the 1:1 lessons are extra!
He’s just being difficult, I sense. There isn’t a legit reason not to do the class.
Then I would do 1:1. Maybe he's embarrassed about his level compared to his peers? Maybe he gets bored if the instructor is tending to other people and he has to wait? I don't know, but learning to swim is worth the $. If he's got a good foundation and he loves the instructor, then maybe he'll get to a good point very quickly. 1:1 could even cost less in the long run, or maybe you could include his sibling also and both will advance more quickly than in a group.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd ask the teacher what he/she recommends. Reluctance towards swimming lessons is so common - they may have suggestions on what to do.
She offered to teach him 1:1 which he LOVES. But the class is a fraction of the cost, and it’s about forming community and making friends. And the 1:1 lessons are extra!
He’s just being difficult, I sense. There isn’t a legit reason not to do the class.