13 answers

Swimming Lessons... - Ada,OK

My 1 year old likes the water, but doesn't want to kick her feet she just likes to cling to me and splash. I was wondering if swimming lessons are helpful at her age? My mother in law says its stupid, but I think it would be fun for her. What do yall think about it and how do I go about finding where the good swimming teachers are? Thanks for looking!

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you can do the mommy and me class yor 1 year old will become acquainted with the water and enjoy the time with you. Don't expect kicking and the rest to be swimmer quality. Most kids develop a water fear at the age of 2 because they realize it is scarey. The best thing you can do is head that of with classes etc.

1 mom found this helpful

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Building your child's confidence in/around water and teaching water safety is never a stupid idea. For more info check out this link: http://www.infantswim.com/.

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2 moms found this helpful

Are you kidding?? Swimming lessons are the best thing for her, it could save her life! It is hot here in Vegas and every other backyard has a swimming pool. Every year we hear of multiple drownings. I can't find any stats, but it is NUMEROUS! You are so right for thinking your child needs swim lessons, I don't care how old.

2 moms found this helpful

way too young... we tried it and it was a waste of money. wait till 2 1/2 at least, unless you have a pool at home and need your baby to have water survival skills.

1 mom found this helpful

Susan is right. Your girl is to young. Even if you decided to get her into swimming classes, she will do with you exactly the same things you could do with her without paying for the class. You can even get one of those inflated plastic pools you can set at you backyard or deck and get her used to being in the water. The fun is for you to get out of the house and see others doing the same thing and paying for it, but you won't get your daughter to swim.

1 mom found this helpful

My daughter has been in swim class since 6 months and my son is starting at 6 months tomorrow!

My daughter is 27 months and is very close to dogging paddling by herself.

1 mom found this helpful

I would TOTALLY put her in lessons. Think about what you want to get out of the lessons. Do you want her to learn to swim or just feel comfortable with the water. Different programs have different goals, so consider that when picking a program. I'd recommend one-on-one lessons if you really want her to be safe in the water, or Mommy and Me if you just want her to be more comfortable when you take her in the pool.

When my son (now 4) was 18 months old he could tip into the pool at any depth, circle back to the wall and pull him self back out where he went in. He loved his swim lessons. At the time he was the youngest child the swim school had had in private lessons (they started him in Mommy and Me but moved him after the first lesson because he had already mastered those skills swimming with me every day).

He's a fantastic swimmer now. He can dive in and retrieve objects from the bottom of the deep end. Float around on his back, swim wherever he wants and keep up with the older kids games in the pool. He has NEVER used any kind of floaty (except for a life jacket at the river).

HTH
T.

1 mom found this helpful

As a swim instructor and coach, I can tell you Swimming lessons are of minimal value before age 3.

If she loves the water---great! Take her to the pool and let her play. Swimming assistance for very small children is good if they are afraid of the water. Before age 3, there is very little in the way of swimming skills that can be taught and retained.

edit: ok, several people disagreed with me...and that's OK. I personally, would not spend my hard earned dollars for someone to try to teach swimming lessons to MY one year old. Who already loves the water! Yes, Lovinlily said dd loves the water....you cannot get a one year old to follow large motor skill commands....but you are welcome to spend money to try, folks. Re: you must have them float if the fall into the pool: why would any parent ever leave their child unattended by the pool. You'll be spending the money again in 2- 4 yrs. for lesson when they can follow instructions. Oh, the reason for the many drownings in Vegas, is not the "swimming ability" of babies, but the lack of supervision of the parents. Just my expert opinion of 22 years in the industry.

1 mom found this helpful

you can do the mommy and me class yor 1 year old will become acquainted with the water and enjoy the time with you. Don't expect kicking and the rest to be swimmer quality. Most kids develop a water fear at the age of 2 because they realize it is scarey. The best thing you can do is head that of with classes etc.

1 mom found this helpful

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