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January 18, 2022

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Each year in Australia, an average of 23 children under five die from unintentional drowning, usually due to factors such as a lack of adult supervision, unrestricted access to water and not having the skills to stay safe in water.

Teaching children to swim is crucial to prevent drowning; it’s also good for fun and fitness, and sets kids up for a lifetime of water enjoyment.

But when is the best age to enrol children in swimming?

Age four is a good time to start

Best age to start swimming lessons

Many learn-to-swim schools offer lessons for children as young as six months, and parents often feel under pressure to get kids started as early as possible.

These lessons can help a child get used to water, learn to put their face under and learn to close their mouths. They can also be a great opportunity for parent and child to bond, as the caregiver is in the water with the child. Research has even suggested swimming in the early years can benefit physical, cognitive and language skills among three to five year olds.

But while it may be possible to teach young infants basic motor skills in water, infants cannot, and should not, be expected to know how to swim or to be able to react appropriately in emergencies.

There’s not a lot of research available on what age is the “best” time to start swim lessons. But studies from Australia suggest children start being able to master water confidence and basic aquatic locomotive skills at around four years of age, regardless of the age they are when lessons begin.

The same researchers also reported that regardless of whether lessons began at two, three or four years of age, children achieved the skills necessary to perform freestyle at five and a half years of age.

Some evidence suggests swimming lessons improve swimming ability and behaviour around the pool in younger children (between two and four years of age).

But the jury is out on how well these skills are maintained in the long term.

You may have also seen videos circulating on social media showing infants being tossed into pools and rolling over to float on their back unassisted.

But Austswim, Australia’s national organisation for the teaching of swimming and water safety, has advised against forced back float and submersion in favour of more developmentally appropriate strategies.

Research I led also showed a negative prior aquatic experience, which can occur during formal learn-to-swim lessons, can negatively impact a child’s achievement level.

Consistency is key

Parents sometimes enrol their children in swimming lessons at a young age and then pull them out before minimum competencies are achieved, frustrated by the cost of lessons and the seemingly slow progress.

COVID has also interrupted swimming lessons and water safety education for many children.

Some will return to lessons and catch up, but some may never return – perhaps due to the cost of lessons or because the child is now focused on a different sport or activity.

So when considering whether to enrol your child in swimming lessons, consider sticking with it over the long term until your child truly has the skills to stay safe in the water.

 

Once enrolled, what’s the best way to learn?

When to start swimming lessons

You might be wondering what’s better: a short weekly lesson or school holiday intensives, where the child does a swim lesson every day for a week or two.

The answer may depend on your family’s schedule and what’s available in your area but even if you opt for holiday intensives, try to provide opportunities for your child to regularly practise the skills learned in the pool.

Research I co-authored found the more often a child swims (formally or informally) in a pool, at the beach or at the river, the better they will do at swimming lessons. My coauthors and I recommended children swim at least once a fortnight.

It has been a tragic summer for drowning so far, with several factors increasing the risk at this time of year. Therefore, water safety is vital.

For children, in addition to learning to swim, that means active adult supervision of children at all times around the water, checking the pool fence and gate are in good working order and learning CPR so you have the skills to respond in an emergency. The Conversation

Amy Peden, Lecturer – Injury Prevention, UNSW

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

  • We started at 6 months. That was the recommended age at the time. Our son continued to have lessons for many years, until he started primary school.

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  • Started the youngest at 8mths. She loves water and just wants to stay in the pool or even when at the beach does not want to get out.

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  • I’m glad to read this list, great info.

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  • consistency is good and both pool safety and beach safety are also important.

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  • I took my daughter to water confidence classes when she was four and she learnt to swim before she started school the following year. I didn’t start lessons earlier than four because she was terrified of the water as a toddler and was not comfortable in the water before that age.

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  • I have had my Ella in the water from a few months old. I hope that as she grows in confidence, so will her swimming ability!

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  • My 8yr old has Down syndrome and has since several years one-on-one swimming lessons. It’s certainly expensive, but also very important. I will continue till she till she has the skills to be safe in the water.

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  • My daughter is yet to start and it makes me nervous but i will do it when she is ready mentally

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  • This makes me feel so much better. My kids are 5, 3 and 19 months and I haven’t started swimming lessons for them yet and thought I was terrible because everyone else I know already has there kids in lessons.

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  • Yeah, I found my kids didn’t concentrate till they were about 4, and didn’t really like lessons till they were 5 or so.

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  • Great article, very informative

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  • With my first I tried to get her into swimming lessons then the pandemic hit and it was lockdown.
    Now I’ve got baby number two I’ll be enrolling both of them in lessons this year. Hopefully it will go ahead and we can actually get moving!

    Reply

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