What to Expect. . .From Signing Up For Swim Team
(Or, what did I get myself into?)
So, you signed your precious little one up for swim team,
cautiously optimistic that they won't have to be rescued on their first
lap across the pool. But, you are wondering, what is it all about? Most
importantly, your child will improve dramatically in swimming, just by
practicing for real everyday.
It is most likely, unless your child is an undiscovered Mark
Spitz, if this is their first season on swim team, they will be swimming
in the Developmental Meets (b-Meets). These meets are for ALL swimmers
on the team, and provide a fun environment for learning the ropes of
swimming in a meet, rather than just in practice. Your child should try
swimming at least two different strokes during the meet (freestyle,
backstroke, and/or breaststroke, with the potential for fly later on.
Developmental meets are also a good place to volunteer. The easiest way
to volunteer is to be a timer. You get to meet other parents, and have
the opportunity to see and learn close up. And, timing is easy.
But don't volunteer at YOUR first meet. Watch, enjoy, have fun.
My oldest daughter has been very successful at swimming, but at her
first Developmental Meet (they were called "B" meets till that was
deemed politically incorrect a few years ago), she (all of six years
old) jumped in the water long after everyone else, swam well, and then
stopped for a while to tread water and look around just before reaching
the end. She finally touched as the timers beseeched her to finish what
she started. I didn't know a thing about organized swimming, but I knew
that being last in the water and dawdling at the end wasn't what you
want. So I took a whistle into the family room and we practiced starting
and finishing. . .not because we have a pool in that room (or in any
other room, for that matter). Instead, I had her jump off the one couch
and run to the other side. While that might be a little compulsive on my
part, it helped tremendously.