Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is ridiculously easy to teach kids to swim as long as you are consistent and frequently go to pool. Parents are just too lazy to get in the water
I think it’s easy to get your kid used to the water and comfortable in the water. It’s not easy for the average person to teach a kid to fully swim though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is ridiculously easy to teach kids to swim as long as you are consistent and frequently go to pool. Parents are just too lazy to get in the water
Maybe your kids, not all kids. Stop generalizing a-hole.
Well, it’s true. Goldfish swim is for parents that are too lazy to get into the pool regularly with their child and actually take an initiative to teach them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is ridiculously easy to teach kids to swim as long as you are consistent and frequently go to pool. Parents are just too lazy to get in the water
Maybe your kids, not all kids. Stop generalizing a-hole.
Well, it’s true. Goldfish swim is for parents that are too lazy to get into the pool regularly with their child and actually take an initiative to teach them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is ridiculously easy to teach kids to swim as long as you are consistent and frequently go to pool. Parents are just too lazy to get in the water
Maybe your kids, not all kids. Stop generalizing a-hole.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter started weekly classes at Kids First when she was five. About a year and a half later, she'd only moved up two levels. They kept saying she needed to "perfect her kick" before they'd move on to the levels that taught strokes. When I realized that she couldn't even tread water, we switched to Goldfish. Within 3 months, she was treading water and able to freestyle 50 yards. By the time we left Goldfish two years later, she was in the swim force class and knew all of the strokes.
My son also took regular weekly classes with Kids First for about two years and only progressed from level 1 to 3 during that time. After every session, they would tell us his back kick wasn't perfect so they couldn't move him to the next level. So for 2 years all he learned (or not even that) was kicking, no hands! Interestingly, one year into his swim lessons with Kids First, we signed him up for a summer swim team at our pool and he was already able to swim 15-20 ft in freestyle! It finally occurred to me that they only offer the first four basic levels, so none of their students ever learns to swim unless you enroll them in their very expensive private lessons. They keep their schedule on paper so that there is no transparency. If you sign up for private lessons, beware that you can only reschedule 1 out of 6 lessons in a session. They don't tell you that at sign up.
I wish I had realized this school was not a good choice sooner and didn't waste so much time and money driving there. We talked to another parent there and he was also pulling his kids out due to a similar experience.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's really interesting to see all the positive responses to Goldfish. We put DD in just before she turned two with the goal of 1) getting her out of the house regularly, and 2) getting her comfortable in the water. She went every week with her granny for about a year and a half, and we finally pulled her out when I asked how swim class went and she said "great!" but upon further questioning I learned she had never put her face in the water (this was confirmed with granny, not just relying on a 3.5 year old here). I wasn't expecting a butterfly stroke out of a preschooler but seriously, WTF.
In retrospect all she learned from Goldfish was flipper flipper fin fin to get out of the pool. In something like 80 weeks of "lessons"! I've had this conversation IRL with other parents and only heard "yeah that place is a waste of money" so it's strange that everyone here has kids that progressed so far and so fast with the same program.
You waited 1.5 years to ask how it was going?
That doesn't seem right though- DD only went through the Glider 1 level but I was there watching and she was putting her face in the water every week.