sandiegoswmimlessons

Private lessons in your own backyard - San Diego Swim Lessons

Want to learn to swim in the privacy of your own home? I can come to you!

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San Diego Swim lessons

Bernadette's Teaching Philosophy...

 
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Swimming with Bernadette swim lesson program takes a different approach to lesson instruction, balancing a combination of hard work, trust, and skill development, along with taking time to appreciate and enjoy the feeling of being in the water.

The skill development is a clear progression, directly related to stroke techniques of competitive swimmers. My lesson program combines on encouragement towards independent skill performance, interactive participation from each swimmer, goal setting and achievement-based learning progressions, along with learning to be safe in and around the water.

Teaching Progressions 

Swimmers are taught single skills and are expected to develop a mastery of each skill prior to moving on to the next step in the progression (i.e. kicks should not be introduced in front or back position until swimmers are floating on his or her own). All four competitive strokes have a logical progression from pushing off, to floating then gliding and kicking, and finally adding strokes and breathing. 

I will continually evaluate the skill level of a swimmer and provide clear, constructive, specific feedback to help them improve. 

Swimmers will be involved in setting goals for themselves and I will help them to achieve these goals. Swimmers have an opportunity to earn embroidered stars when they make significant progress and or achieve the goals they have set. 

Swim lessons are geared toward generating confident, independent swimmers from an early age. I use minimal equipment in early levels to train swimmers to perform skills on their own. Most pieces of equipment are merely things to hold on to that provide little flotation, while the child gains confidence in his or her abilities in the water. 

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Rings, and pool toys are used to aide in establishing comfort in the water. Rings can be used in higher levels for underwater swimming treasure hunts, etc. 

Full and half noodles are used to assist with side kick body position and the early components of switches. 

Kickboards are used to build endurance when kicking and as an introduction to back floating, elementary backstroke kick and breaststroke kick.

Because learning new skills can be tough and challenging, students who listen and work hard doing lessons are offered a small treat at the end of each lesson. (This is usually a tootsie roll or a starburst). Please let me know if you are not comfortable with this and I will substitute the treat with a sticker. 

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Other awards/ rewards

Students can earn embroidered stars for various skills learned and/ or goals achieved. Goals for stars will be discussed and set together during lessons. 

 

Meet Bernadette Diepenbrock - San Diego Swim Instructor

 
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Hi I’m Bernadette!

I started teaching swimming lessons summer after my freshman year in high school in the Bay Area at a place called Pals Swim School in San Mateo, CA.

Pals was originally located at Serra High School and employed 32-40 high school and college aged young adults to teach swimming lessons. (We all were required to wear blue bathing suits, so we all looked very uniform) and often met each other outside of work to hear someone’s band play or go to the drive-ins and other fun summer escapades after teaching every day in the pool together. It was a very fun summer job!

Most of the instructors taught private lessons from 8:30 am – 5:00 pm with a one-hour lunch and a half hour break. I started as an “aide” and by the 4th session of that summer, I was thrilled to be able to teach my own lessons! The owners of the swim school were an amazing pair of sisters, (daughters of teachers themselves) who had started teaching swim lessons in their parents’ backyard pool. They taught me how to teach swimming and, in an essence, how to teach and how to swim – still two of my favorite things 36 summers later!

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When I was a young girl, our family had a membership to the Los Altos, Adobe Creek Country Club. The club had 6 pools and 14 tennis courts. We used to drive down during the summer and hang out by the pool. I remember watching adult swim laps and being moved by the beauty and grace of the different strokes. On 4th of July the Club would have funny competitions, like who could finish drinking beer from a baby bottle first? They would also have swim races and I remember being so excited to swim against other kids my age. I can still remember when the race started, trying so hard to go fast and trying to roll my head to get air and just gulping in a ton of water and not going fast at all. I envied the beauty and grace of people who knew how to swim.

After my freshman year of high school, I got a job and Pals and by learning how to teach the strokes, I was able to learn how to swim them. I have taught swimming lessons every summer since this first summer when I was 14, (except the year my daughter was born in May). 

I went on to become a PE teacher. 

 In the fall of 2013, I taught a swimming class for one quarter at Reed College

 
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