More non-swimmers: How should children learn to swim?

Basically, it's simple: Fewer swimming pools means fewer swimming lessons - and less confident swimmers.

More non-swimmers: How should children learn to swim?

Basically, it's simple: Fewer swimming pools means fewer swimming lessons - and less confident swimmers. During the corona pandemic, there were times when there were no swimming lessons at all. The result: According to a new Forsa survey, the proportion of non-swimmers among primary school children in Germany has doubled within five years.

Last year, 20 percent of children between the ages of six and ten could not swim - five years earlier it was 10 percent, said the German Life Saving Society in Bad Nenndorf. "The difference is serious, but given the developments over the past two to three years, it's not surprising," said DLRG President Ute Vogt. She warned: "Just as boys and girls learn to read, write and do arithmetic, they must also learn to swim. We must ensure that every child can swim safely by the end of primary school."

The seahorse alone is not enough

The DLRG, according to its own statements Germany's largest private provider of swimming training, had commissioned the representative survey. The last comparable study to date was in 2017. In August 2022, 2000 people aged 14 and over were surveyed nationwide. Among other things, it was about whether they rated themselves as non-swimmers, unsafe swimmers or confident swimmers.

At 57 percent, the proportion of children who are classified by their parents as safe swimmers has remained almost the same in the past year - in 2017 it was 59 percent, in 2010 even 64 percent. The proportion of supposedly safe swimmers increases with age: 26 percent of the parents of six-year-olds stated that their child was already able to swim safely. For ten-year-olds it was 83 percent. Only: From the DLRG's point of view, many parents find this assessment difficult. "Mothers and fathers are still all too often of the opinion that their child can swim if it has the seahorse," said Christian Landsberg, head of training at the DLRG Presidium. "They're on the wrong track there."

Because the seahorse certifies that you have mastered important basics, Landsberg explained that you can only swim safely if you have passed the free swimmer, i.e. the bronze badge. However, 21 percent of the children who, according to their parents, can swim safely or at least unsafely, did not complete a single badge. The DLRG assumes that six out of ten children or 58 percent at the end of elementary school are not confident swimmers.

Swimming ability is linked to income

The survey showed that more than every second child (54 percent) between the ages of six and ten has the seahorse, in 2017 it was 69 percent. 24 percent of the children have completed the Freischwimmer, 13 percent can prove silver and three percent gold. Among children aged ten and over, 42 percent have completed the Freischwimmer, 24 percent have silver and eight percent have gold. Half of those surveyed said they could swim well or very well. Only 35 percent of people with a secondary school diploma rated themselves as good swimmers, 38 percent of people with a migration background - and only 37 percent of those over 60.

"What surprised us in terms of clarity is the difference in income," said Vogt. According to the survey, almost half (49 percent) of children from households with a monthly net income of less than 2,500 euros cannot swim - with a household net income of more than 4,000 euros it is twelve percent. Vogt emphasized: "Being able to swim shouldn't be a question of money. It's all the more important that every school is able to teach swimming appropriately."

The energy crisis makes training difficult

However, baths are necessary for this. But in the energy crisis, according to a recently published survey by the consulting firm, Ernst

According to the Forsa figures, 87 percent of those surveyed have an accessible swimming pool in the vicinity. In 2017 it was 92 percent. For people from places with fewer than 5,000 inhabitants, it was 78 percent - after 90 percent five years ago. "These results indicate that the trend in pool supply continues to go in the wrong direction," criticized Vogt.

NEXT NEWS