Anonymous wrote:The issue isn't necessarily money but it's skin color. POC tend to not want to get darker, esp in earlier generations. Swimming was an outdoor activity. Every POC I know has a relative or knows someone who has a skin color issue about getting darker.
Signed,
POC
Anonymous wrote:NP AA woman. My parents grew up down South during Jim Crow and don't swim. They started me in lessons when I was 4. My cousin and I took lessons together and he was a life guard at one point. I swim regularly at the pools in DC now. The hair thing is an issue, but getting the exercise is more important to me. Many many many of my AA friends don't know how to swim and will not get in the water because of hair issues.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:According to a PP/ARTICLE black people don't swim due to violence and intimidation? Does anyone actually believe this crap?
There are news stories every few years about AA patrons or invited guests of white patrons of private pools being turned away or subjected to harassment for no other reason than being black.
WOW! Sounds like a wide spread problem.
You know the media plays the race card all the time to generate $$$$, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Given the newly-added citations, I don't doubt the statistic.
Should swimming be taught in every public school and be mandatory?
Most public schools don't have pools.
My oldest was at Piney Branch ES in MCPS and had swimming every year, I think, as part of PE. However, she was already a strong swimmer by then. I don't think any other MCPS ES has a pool. Jackson Rd ES could walk to the MLK pool easily, but I don't know if they do.
Grew up in Germany where schools didn't have pools either, so we were brought to the local pool by bus. We had swim class in 3rd grade. And before that our parents made sure we took swim classes, which cost money, btw. In DC pools offer swim classes for FREE and they still have to rescue about 2 kids per season. Pulling them out of the pool and then no parents to be found. It boils down to lazy parents/ lack of parenting skills in within certain communities.
Anonymous wrote:40 something Black woman here- I never learned to swim. My father who grew up in a rural area, learned to swim in a creek. My mother never learned to swim. There was no creek where she grew up, and pools were segregated. I don't have children of my own. DH knows how to swim and taught his children from previous marriage. Swim lessons were on my summer To Do list, but I have so little free time right now. I do intend to learn at some point.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Given the newly-added citations, I don't doubt the statistic.
Should swimming be taught in every public school and be mandatory?
Most public schools don't have pools.
My oldest was at Piney Branch ES in MCPS and had swimming every year, I think, as part of PE. However, she was already a strong swimmer by then. I don't think any other MCPS ES has a pool. Jackson Rd ES could walk to the MLK pool easily, but I don't know if they do.
Anonymous wrote:One of the swim teams my DC's summer team swims against is 95% black, and they're a REALLY good team. So I'm not finding that POC swim at a lesser rate than whites. Also, my DCs are mixed and their team is pretty diverse.