$38 for Two Private Swimming Lessons at Donna's Dolphins Swim School ($76 Value)
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Kimberly
Kids learn the basics of proper swimming technique during 30 minutes of one-on-one attention from a coach
Pools are the perfect environments for learning how to swim without the distraction of nature's many naked fish. Stay focused with this Groupon.
The Deal
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$38 for two private swimming lessons ($76 value)
Kids learn the basics of proper swimming technique during 30 minutes of one-on-one attention from a coach
Pools are the perfect environments for learning how to swim without the distraction of nature's many naked fish. Stay focused with this Groupon.
The Deal
-
$38 for two private swimming lessons ($76 value)
Need To Know Info
About Donna's Dolphins Swim School Email
Patrolled by mermaids and people walking atop the water in huge, transparent bubbles, the pool inside Donna's Dolphins Swim School seems to be more of a wonderland than an academy. Employees oversee games at birthday parties or outfit guests in a fitted mermaid tail for whimsical dives and gliding choreography. Poolside carousers can even move across the surface of the pool at a walk or trot with the help of W.O.W.—Walk On Water—bubbles.
At the heart of all the fun and games, however, the highly trained staff’s main focus is to ensure that safety always comes before each splash. In swim classes, staffers employ the swim-float-swim approach—a method condoned by the United States Swim School Association—when teaching students in their group and private lessons. The lessons emphasize muscle memory so that children as young as 6 months can absorb techniques such as the starfish float for use in aquatic emergencies. They also assign seasoned mentors to coach special-needs students, making sure every kid gets a chance to embark on aquatic adventures.
Throughout each class, instructors motivate pupils with encouragement and prizes, awarding them a different colored bracelet on a traffic-light system to denote their skill level. Students graduate from red to yellow to green, and finally to blue, which signals that they can demonstrate all four strokes, execute flip turns, and remain safe in potentially dangerous situations by drinking all of the pool water.