Anonymous wrote:Oldest swam at 6. It's a body composition thing. Some kids just sink so need stronger swimming skills to get them.from A to B. My young guy is a chunk at 2 and can swim short distances already. It helps he doesn't sink like a stone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:6-7 for my older two, who suffered through years of group swim lessons at the Y.
Under 4 for my youngest, when we wised up and started with a private teacher. Wish I could have turned back the clock with my older two and gone private. The difference is amazing--with swimming, such small adjustments can make a huge difference in how efficient a stroke is.
Can you explain more why the private lessons made a huge difference? Some of these group lessons are not that crowded. Right now, my 4 year old is in a group lesson with 3 others. Sorry, I have been wondering if we should go private.
Anonymous wrote:6-7 for my older two, who suffered through years of group swim lessons at the Y.
Under 4 for my youngest, when we wised up and started with a private teacher. Wish I could have turned back the clock with my older two and gone private. The difference is amazing--with swimming, such small adjustments can make a huge difference in how efficient a stroke is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:By 3 our girls could go off the diving board, go under from the jump, and swim to the side of the diving well. I'd find a better teacher or program.
NP. This is unusually young. I taught swim lessons for ten years to ages 2-10 and only ever had a handful of kids who could do that before the age of 3.
It is definitely unusually young but I taught one of my babies to swim underwater when she was between 6 and 9 months. She could climb up to the diving board by 2 and jump in the deep end, swim to the ladder and climb out. By the time a child is 2 or 3 they become more fearful and somewhat headstrong and it is harder to teach them than when they are still nonverbal infants. Seems like most parents are too cautious themselves to do what I did but I had read a book with a specific technique and it worked well with my child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:By 3 our girls could go off the diving board, go under from the jump, and swim to the side of the diving well. I'd find a better teacher or program.
NP. This is unusually young. I taught swim lessons for ten years to ages 2-10 and only ever had a handful of kids who could do that before the age of 3.
It is definitely unusually young but I taught one of my babies to swim underwater when she was between 6 and 9 months. She could climb up to the diving board by 2 and jump in the deep end, swim to the ladder and climb out. By the time a child is 2 or 3 they become more fearful and somewhat headstrong and it is harder to teach them than when they are still nonverbal infants. Seems like most parents are too cautious themselves to do what I did but I had read a book with a specific technique and it worked well with my child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:By 3 our girls could go off the diving board, go under from the jump, and swim to the side of the diving well. I'd find a better teacher or program.
NP. This is unusually young. I taught swim lessons for ten years to ages 2-10 and only ever had a handful of kids who could do that before the age of 3.
It is definitely unusually young but I taught one of my babies to swim underwater when she was between 6 and 9 months. She could climb up to the diving board by 2 and jump in the deep end, swim to the ladder and climb out. By the time a child is 2 or 3 they become more fearful and somewhat headstrong and it is harder to teach them than when they are still nonverbal infants. Seems like most parents are too cautious themselves to do what I did but I had read a book with a specific technique and it worked well with my child.