M-DCPS offers swimming lessons to young students

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The leading cause of injury death among young children in Florida is drowning, a tragic reality that swimming lessons can help prevent. For this reason, Miami-Dade County Public Schools offers swimming lessons during the school day in communities where access to pools is limited and the numbers of drowning deaths for young children is high.

“In our community, all of these housing complexes have pools,” said principal Jordana Schneider, whose school, Charles R. Hadley Elementary, was recently hosting swim lessons for its students. “The kids love the lessons. The lessons are engaging and are taught in small groups, definitely needed in our community where childhood drownings rank high.”

The Department of Life Skills at M-DCPS has been offering lessons using the Red Cross Learn-to-Swim program (LTS) curriculum for over 45 years. The LTS program rotates to approximately 28 elementary schools throughout Miami-Dade County per school year, seven every nine weeks. The program focuses on students from pre-K to second grade.

Students receive 30-minute swim lessons in a shallow, round, portable and heated pool.

LTS instructor Aliorky Garcia, who teaches the students at Charles R. Hadley Elementary, said that he finds out on the first day of lessons that most of these kids have never had swimming lessons so they are not aware how dangerous pools and the ocean can be. This is important since many apartment complexes where students live are near canals or lakes.

“By the end of the lessons, 90 percent of these students can glide without the kickboard and are blowing bubbles so they can breathe,” Garcia said. “They can be in the sea or a pool with no life jacket and they will survive.”

Garcia finds that second graders who are now in their third year of the program are swimming the freestyle stroke since he can put all the elements together once these students learn the basics.

For parents who live in communities where the numbers of drowning deaths for young children is high, these lessons are a great first step in keeping kids safe and helping them develop a love for swimming.

“It was a great opportunity for [Elijah] to learn the skills that he needs to introduce him to swimming. It’s a great program,” said Erica Guzman, whose kindergartener Elijah Lanzas participated in the swim lessons this year. “He enjoyed it so much he told me to make sure I packed his swimming stuff every day.”

Guzman’s 21-year-old son, as well as her husband, participated in the LTS when they were in M-DCPS. Both are now strong swimmers. Each parent receives an individual progress report. This report displays each skill introduced during the swim lessons. The report exhibits each swim skill detailing how well their child mastered each skill.

Beyond swimming skills, students are taught important Red Cross safety tips. For example, they are advised on the concept of “Reach or throw, don’t go” which encourages swimmers never to jump into the water to save a drowning person. Students are instead instructed to get a pool pole, a big towel, a pool noodle, or other long object to try to aid the person.

They are also taught how to use lifejackets.

“This program makes me happy because we are doing something good for these kids,” Garcia said.

One of his motivations for teaching students to swim is because as a child, he witnessed a 10-year-old student drown. “There are too many kids drowning and I think we are bringing those numbers down.”

For more information on this initiative, please contact Miami-Dade County Public Schools’ Life Skills Department at 305-995-1963.

Bobby D. Williams is a Curriculum Support Specialist in Life Skills Department of Miami-Dade County Public Schools.

 

 

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