Time to Play! Popup Breathing

Kids learn by playing. The more you can make learning to swim fun for your kids, the more they’ll like it, the quicker they’ll learn, and the more fun you’ll have teaching them. Once your kids are able to take a breath whenever they need one, they’re well on their way to water safety. This game will help them get a feel for how to surface whenever they need to breathe.

One of the things that you need to teach your kids when they’re learning to swim is that pushing down with their arms moves them up in the water. To help them practice this without realizing they’re practicing, make it a game. How high up can they get by pushing down into the water with their arms?

Can they pop up so that their shoulders are above the surface? Their chests? Their waists? Can they pop up higher than the edge of the pool? Can they pop up higher than you can? (It’s up to you to decide whether to let them win.)

Why How You Explain Is As Important as What You Explain When You’re Teaching Your Kids to Swim

The first step in working with any skill is explaining what you’ll be doing, in both simple and imaginative terms. How do you explain a skill in a way that works for kids?

Use imagination and visualization.

In some ways, your body in the water is like a fish. In other ways, it’s like a boat. In other ways, it’s like a dancer. When you’re completely submerged, you’re like a fish. When you’re swimming on the surface of the water, you’re like a boat. When you’re moving all of the parts of your body in coordinated motion, you’re like a dancer.

When fish swim, they’re graceful. They’re balanced. They’re slippery. They move efficiently, with each motion propelling them through the water. A well designed boat slices through the water, creating as little resistance and drag as possible. A dancer is aware of where each part of his body is in space.

As you teach your kids each new swimming skill, use these themes of a fish, a boat, and a dancer to help describe how the skill fits into the whole. If the ideas of fish, boats, and dancers don’t float your child’s, um, boat, you can tailor your themes to incorporate your kids’ interests. Dancers and gymnasts are great examples of coordinated motion. So are baseball, basketball, and hockey players. Fish slip gracefully through the water, but so do mermaids.

Use all of your child’s senses to teach.

What does a skill look like, feel like, sound like? Maybe your child can even associate a taste or smell with a particular skill. The more hooks you can use to capture your child’s attention and imagination, the more deeply he’ll learn the skill.

Boil it down.

Once you’ve discussed the concepts in all sorts of imaginative ways, be prepared to boil down what you’re teaching your child to do into just one or two words. The background ideas of fish and boats are a foundation for his interest and understanding. The simple instruction to “blow bubbles” or kick with “knees straight” will help your child to focus in the moment on exactly what he needs to do to learn the swimming skill you’re teaching him.

If your child expresses fear, try to reframe that fear as excitement and possibility. If that doesn’t work, don’t force him to try doing what he fears. Work towards it instead. Move on to demonstrating. Backtrack to practicing skills he’s already mastered if necessary and come back to your explanation of the new skill from a new angle.

What’s next? The next element of the pattern for teaching your kids a swimming skill is demonstrating and setting an example, but before we get into that, it’s time to take a break. Tomorrow’s Friday, and Friday is time to play.

What You Don’t Know about Reviewing That Will Change the Way You Think about Teaching Forever

Whether you’re teaching your kids to swim or teaching them long division, you’re going to spend a lot of time reviewing things you’ve already covered. It’s easy to feel like you’re spinning your wheels when you’re reviewing, but there’s something you should know that will change the way you think about teaching forever.

What You Don’t Know about Reviewing That Will Change the Way You Think about Teaching Forever

Reviewing is the heart of the lesson. This is so important that I’ll say it again: reviewing is the heart of the lesson. The first time your child is exposed to a new skill, he only scratches its surface. When you’re teaching your child to swim, he has to listen to you, watch you, and feel his own body, all while trying to interpret your feedback and the feedback he’s getting from his body and the water. It’s a big job, and it’s a lot to process. Not all of that processing is going to take place in the pool.

After you teach your kids a new swimming skill and get out of the pool, they’ll rest and play and do other things, but they’re still thinking about the skill you introduced. They’re still getting insights into how it worked. They’re still analyzing what was going on in the pool. A whole bunch of the learning of the new skill takes place after the lesson is over. They might even dream about it!

Don’t be disappointed if the bulk of your swimming lesson is dedicated to review. That’s the way it’s supposed to be. That’s going to help your kids really get it.