Swimming Parents: 10 Ways They Can Help Out Coaches

Emory parents 5
Photo Courtesy: Heidi Torregroza

Swimming Parents: 10 Ways They Can Help Out Coaches

This article on swimming parents originally ran a few years ago, but the heart of the piece remains true and unchanged. Take a few minutes to read the insights below and reflect on what the author is saying. It could be helpful in generating harmony between key parties in a swimmer’s life.

By Wayne Goldsmith

A close friend and one of the giants of world swimming coaching has a saying:

“My idea of coaching heaven is to have a 10-lane, world-class swimming facility, with a fully equipped, professional quality gymnasium and a state of the art recovery centre built right alongside the world’s biggest orphanage.”

Why would someone with Olympic Gold medal, world record and world championship level coaching credentials feel so strongly about the challenges of working with swimming parents?

It should be relatively straight forward: coaches coach; swimmers swim, parents parent. Not all that complicated really. This is not a thesis on thermodynamics – it’s just three groups of people working together to achieve a common goal – to help a swimmer realize their full potential.

So why is it that so many coaches will tell you that their biggest challenge is not finding pool space or identifying talented swimmers or battling bad weather or being able to buy the latest and greatest swimming training equipment: It’s working with difficult and sometimes destructive swimming parents?

Swimming Parents: 10 Ways They Can Help Out Coaches

Photo Courtesy: Griffin Scott

Photo Courtesy: Griffin Scott

1. Don’t Do Everything For the Kids

Confidence is the essential ingredient in all great swimming success stories. Confidence comes from knowing: i.e. knowing you can do it. Swimming parents think they’re helping by doing all the little things for their kids but the parents who pack their child’s swimming bag, empty it for them, make their breakfast, carry their swim gear, fill their water bottles etc. are doing the exact opposite. They are creating dependent swimmers – instead of independent young people and that’s not going to result in developing teenagers who possess a strong sense of confidence, self-belief, resilience and self-reliance.

2. Do Not Coach Their Kids in Technical Areas.

Coaches coach. Parents parent. That’s it. It’s that simple. Coaches help swimmers develop things like physical skills, technical skills, turns, dives, starts, finishes, kicking, pulling – all that stuff. Swimming parents help their children learn values and virtues and help their children to develop the positive character traits that will sustain them throughout their lives. If everyone stays focused on doing their job well – everyone wins – particularly the swimmer.

3. Don’t Listen To Other Parents

Swimming parents listening to other swimming parents about technical issues really annoys coaches. For example: “My friend, Susie, whose child swims at another program told me that they do a lot more breaststroke than we do. Can we start doing a lot more breaststroke?” Coaches spend years learning how to write programs, how to enhance swimming skills, how to improve stroke technique and how to build an effective training environment. Unless “Susie” has the same skills, experience, knowledge and commitment to coaching, it is unlikely her opinions on technical matters are as valid as the coach’s. Sitting on the side of another pool, watching training from a distance (and let’s face it – parents only really watch their own child anyway), then making assumptions to apply to all swimmers at all pools is so ludicrous it is incredible that it happens at all. Yet – for some reason – some swimming parents find it necessary to listen to the views of people who have no idea what they’re talking about rather than have faith and trust in their child’s highly trained and experienced professional coach.

4. Avoid Gossip

Want to know why swimming parents are banned from so many pools around the world – Gossip. Coaches hate those little groups of swimming parents who sit together comparing “John’s freestyle technique” to “Mary’s freestyle technique” and then criticise the coach because neither child swims as fast as Michael Phelps, even though they’re only six years old and train once a month. Got a problem with the coach – go to the source and talk to the coach – not to other swimming parents.

5. Talk Non-Swimming With Their Kids

We all love this sport. But it’s just a sport. There are movies, art, music, politics, literature, theatre, other sports, rest time, going to the beach, hiking, learning another language…..the world is full of millions of wonderful experiences and children need the opportunity to be exposed to as many of them as possible. There is no need to talk swimming all the time. All it will do it increase the likelihood that the child will walk away from the sport in their mid teens and frankly – this “teenage retirement” syndrome is a worldwide swimming epidemic that we all have to work together and try to stop.

6. Be Realistic With Times.

No one swims PRs every time they swim. No one. Re-read this line 10 times. No one. Coaches cringe when swimming parents approach them saying “Steve didn’t do a PR in his butterfly today – what’s wrong? What’s the problem?” The child might have done a PR is seven other events, have done five football practices through the week and sat for four school exams but because they didn’t do a PR in one event, there’s a problem?! Trust in the coach to do his or her job.

7. Gradual Development Is Fine.

Coaches design and develop their program structures with a lot of thought, research and experience behind it. This long-term development pathway concept has its roots in mainstream education. For example, children aged 5 are introduced to basic mathematics at school.  When they turn 8 years of age, they are exposed to long division. When they’re 15 they can do trigonometry, calculus and advanced geometry. Similarly, there’s a logical, purposeful process of developing athletes from learning to swim their first stroke to being able to win a national swimming title. Swimming parents who try to force coaches to push their kids ahead to the next level of development before they’re ready, are not helping the child (or the coach).

8. No Race Instructions.

Just don’t do it. No need to comment further on this – just don’t.

9. Quality Performances Should Not Equate to Better Treatment.

This happens everywhere in the world and for some reason some swimming parents just don’t get it. Child wins – love them with all your heart. Child loses – love them with all your heart. Child does ten PRs – love and support them unconditionally. Child doesn’t do a PR for six months – love and support them unconditionally. How fast a child swims should have no bearing on how they are treated, spoken to or loved. When it comes to loving and supporting your child – particularly in public – winning and losing make no difference.

10. Don’t Disturb Coach On the Deck.

There’s a really good reason why coaches don’t like this. Safety. If a coach turns their head to talk to a swimming parent about “Billy’s backstroke turns” or “Jenny’s butterfly splits” and there’s a safety issue in the pool, the coach is legally responsible and liable. Put it another way, if another swimming parent was talking with the coach on deck during workout and that meant your own child’s safety was compromised, how would you feel?

When coaches, swimmers and swimming parents work together as partners in performance – 100% committed and focused on helping the swimmer to realise their full potential, amazing – incredible things are not only possible – but inevitable.

A positive, constructive, successful swimming program is very possible when swimmers, coaches and swimming parents work together honestly, respectfully and with integrity.

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SWIMMING PARENTS
SWIMMING PARENTS
9 years ago

I like the technical conversation bits and pieces. If you have access to a coach [that is not your team coach] that can improve an athletes performance, and they teach skills and techniques your coach doesn’t teach, everyone can learn from the experience. If a coach doesn’t believe he/she can learn from anything new from another coach , they probably need to find something else to do. It is an exciting sport with new and improved training techniques, The sport has been around for decades, with new records posted regularly.

David Hodson
David Hodson
9 years ago

I’m sure coaches do learn from other coaches/coaching techniques but they inform how they develop their programmes and should not be just thrown in the mix when they come along. Parents a) generally don’t really know what they are talking about and so their comments are unhelpful and b) if they do I’m sure they would discuss things in a constructive way with their child’s coach. I have been a golf pupil for a long time and the time my game went to pot was when I tried to get advice from everywhere rather than let my coach concentrate on the things that would build my game.
And as we all know less than 1% will go on to be a significant force in any sport. So let the coach coach.

Sandra Livsey
9 years ago

Only ten??? Ha!

Chicago Scott
Chicago Scott
9 years ago

I remember reading that Missy Franklin’s mother packed her bag for her until she went off to college. It might even have been a ‘Swimming World’ article. While most of these make sense, a little extra support for a HS athlete who has multiple AP courses, and spends most of their time either in the water or studying would seem to make some sense.

Karin Knudson O'Connell

Can we add in the parents that walk the pool deck at practice using stopwatch on all the kids? It’s PRACTICE people! Let the kids be!!

Leander
Leander
9 years ago

Why would you need to walk the pool deck to time the kids? It’s much easier to see all the lanes from the stands. 😉

swimparent
swimparent
9 years ago

That includes the ones videotaping from the stands during practice, too. This is also an invasion of privacy of the other swimmers.

Joe Bottom
Joe Bottom
1 year ago
Reply to  swimparent

You ever heard of Instagram sll teams film it is a protected right…

Joe Bottom
Joe Bottom
1 year ago

Why do coaches use a stopwatch? I am a swim parent that coached swimming for 25 yrs. It is important to see progress in worouts…this is why I time my daughter during the main set…

Paul Windrath
Paul Windrath
9 years ago

While I concur with most of Wayne’s observations and I hate to be critical of my fellow coaches, there are a huge number of coaches who, knowingly or otherwise, hurt our sport as much as the parents AND they don’t have a clue they are contributing to the dismal 40% retention at the age group level.

After almost 40 years of watching coaches AND coaching, I hate to say this BUT…
– Only the very good coaches put much thought into training. Unfortunately, most of our swim coaches from age group to club to college really don’t have a clue about setting up a season with a long term perspective. They coach the way they were coaches and often did not get much past “B” times.
– Most coaches react to swims the same way parents do. If the athlete does well, they are all smiles. If they do poorly, they are frowny faced. Kids figure that out pretty fast.

Ok – off my soap box. There is a reason parents behave the way they do. Sometimes, it is because the coach does not know very much. 🙁

a minority's opinion
a minority's opinion
9 years ago
Reply to  Paul Windrath

As a former swimmer, swim instructor, swim coach, and swim parent, I am tired of reading articles about how parents should leave all coaching to the coach. There are a lot of exhausting parents out there. There are some CRAZY swim/soccer/baseball/academic parents out there too!

On the other hand, there are some incompetent coaches and instructors out there who do not always know what they are doing. Sometimes coaches are bad because they are inexperienced; sometimes they are just inadequate; sometimes they are overworked; sometimes they are just bad coaches.
Not all professional coaches are professionals. Some just sort of stumble into the work as a job to do while they are at a crossroad in life.

Articles such as the one above can be helpful, but can also overstep their boundary in telling parents how to parent. Should a parent blindly drop their child off at a pool to be coached by a coach who is inadequate? Should a parent not help a child to fill in gaps in a coach’s weak area? I am not condoning crazy behavior (of course, the definition of crazy behavior varies), but I don’t think a ban on parenting and looking after the welfare of a child is in the swimmer’s best interest. Every now and again, parents of swimmers give insight to the swimmer one might not have gotten orherwise. Why don’t we- coaches, swimmers, and parents, try working together?

Mike
Mike
9 years ago

Absolutely agree with you. This article has many good points but it’s the zero tolerance vibe I get from it that’s turning me off. Some parents are crazy. Practically psychotic. But others can be an asset to a coach. We are not all the enemy.

swimparent
swimparent
9 years ago

Agree. Just because a coach was a champion swimmer, does not necessarily make him/her a great coach just yet. Some coaches know little about child development and don’t have their own kids for first-hand experience of the whole child (in and out of the pool – they are not just swimmers, they are kids too). Also, the coach was likely very successful as an athlete; do they know how it feels to be a late developer or how to work thru the ups and downs of swimming (many coaches will ignore kids on their down periods and focus on other top or up&coming swimmers but this is a time the athlete needs MORE coaching, not less).

Steve
Steve
4 years ago

I REALLY agree with your comment about parents helping to coach on technique. I understand the coach-swimmer relationship is important, but feel that the parent-swimmer relationship that can be built around swimming is frankly more important to swimming and just all around human growth.

I take my daughter to open swim times and swim laps with her. We watch videos about technique (she loves to watch world record swims and Olympic replays), we talk about strategy, meets, and dream about her swimming future. We discuss a focus technique for each practice . . . breathing one day, underwaters the next, etc. and try to build on it for each practice, and she has become the best swimmer for her age on the team.

Her coach is good about drilling out the yards to build stamina, and I see his strategy in it, but honestly, he has a pretty hard job and mostly watches as the 15 or 20 kids he has to keep track of practice poor turns, underwaters and stroke, drilling the bad technique into their muscle memory.

I don’t coach her during meets much, both my wife and I motivate her, we ask what the coach said to do for a swim, and motivate her to do that – so she doesn’t have too much going on in her mind while swimming.

I understand that coaches feel kind of possessive over swimmer performance, but I wish they would be more receptive to allowing some parent assistance. Maybe it isn’t for everyone to be that involved, but I feel the full family interactions really enhances a swimmers overall growth and the swimming experience much more than just dropping her off and picking her up from practice would.

Susan
Susan
3 years ago

I think your wrong. If you think your coach is not doing a good job on your team you should find another
coach or move to another group on your team. You have to have confidence in your coach and give them free rein to coach. Another item that should be on this list is parents who berate their kids coaches in front of them. My son has been a club swimmer since he was 8. He has had all kinds of different coaches. Early on I learned from a veteran parent how destructive parents can be. You want your kid to stay in the sport and do well then you need to smile after he swims. Tell him you enjoy watching him race and that’s it. Simole rule I learned at a USA swim clinic. Berate him. Coach him. Make it not fun for him anc he will leave the sport in his teenage years.

doka
doka
9 years ago
Reply to  Paul Windrath

So true!

doka
doka
9 years ago
Reply to  Paul Windrath

So true Paul!

Grene
Grene
9 years ago
Reply to  Paul Windrath

So true….. 😉

A swimparent, who loves to see my boys swimming – PR or not 😉

swimparent
swimparent
9 years ago

#4 – the gossip isn’t usually directed toward the coach…it’s usually about other kids or other swim parents.

# 6 – so true. NO ONE gets a PR every time they swim.

And agree with a lot of what Paul says above, having observed a coach that yelled/yelled/yelled constantly, putting the fear in his swimmers. They all do well until about 14 since they are pushed so hard…it’s after that they start sinking.

Anne Hall
9 years ago

Parents should be banned from watching competitions too. I heard a parent going crazy at a 9 year old , leaning over the balcony shouting at the child because they were 2,seconds slower than the child in front … It saddened me greatly, no praise for the child, nothing just anger it was disgraceful

Swimming Offical
Swimming Offical
9 years ago
Reply to  Anne Hall

Oh stop it! firstly, the parents will learn. secondly, in most venues you cannot hear what the parents on the bleachers are screaming? let them scream! I work on deck at almost every meet I attend and the screaming is just noise. Parents invest time and money in watching their swimmers progress, banning parents is just a silly idea.

Jessica Bauer
9 years ago
Reply to  Anne Hall

Our club kicked a guy out for doing exactly that.

Dan Smith
Dan Smith
9 years ago

Thanks Paul!

What you describe is not unique to swimming, but all youth sports. Each sport needs better development of coaches, and parents need to learn that too. Sometimes a person can learn the technical aspects of a sport but can’t teach it well, and can’t inspire any age group to learn it. The same applies to constructing teaching. training sessions. Others do, and yet are criticized for it as the misplaced goal of development sometimes gets lost with youth and performance winning is substituted.

Kids figure it out pretty quick by watching their friends/competitors reactions, coaches reactions and all the parents reactions.

My two cents after 50+ years in the sport of swimming, with side trips to handball, and triathlon, and two kids who went through several youth sports and high school sports, and one grandson old enough to “try out youth sports”…we need to demand better trained coaches, as parents pay for it, and let our kids enjoy the sport with our full unconditional support, no matter the outcome on field of play or pool. I’d rather have a well-adjusted adult that loved their youth sports experience than someone who spends their life recovering from it, the coach, and me as parent…or grandparent.

John Coan
John Coan
9 years ago

I completely agree with the 10 listed and perhaps guilty of one or two! The one important comment I want to make is; parents spend a lot of time and money on swimming. It is a major commitment for every swim family. Many coaches understand that; but unfortunately many do not. I suspect the good coaches, whom have passion for the sport and their swimmers have very little issues with the above.

Wayne Goldsmith
9 years ago

Hi everyone – as usual anything I write about swimming and parenting ignites passionate discussion.

Couldn’t help myself from adding something. The comments here about some coaches are well founded.

Hopefully we’re moving on as a sport and those coaches who feel that pushing young swimmers up and down a lane for hours and hours doing mindless mediocre miles is a good idea are in the minority.

Having traveled extensively for 25 years, the “drop-out” rate is a serious problem all over the world. Every major swimming nation is addressing the issue and considering the best way to combat it.

In some nations – including Australia – the number of registered competitive swimmers is way way down from where they were in the mid 90s – and they continue to fall.

The swimming nations look at marketing, advertising, promotional campaigns and a range of other potential solutions but most fail to address the most important issue – coaching.

Coaches are the “shop-front” of the sport. They are often the first – (and last) – impression of the sport of swimming. They are the driving force of the day to day delivery of the sport: they are on the sport’s “front line”.

In the “old days”, as I am fond of telling my own swimmers and children (I have four), coaches would rely on physical preparation alone as their “weapon” of choice and the sport became one of attrition and an uncompromising commitment to hard work. That’s all we knew. There was no other way.

Now, (thankfully) we understand that performance is multi-disciplinary and that psychology, technique, skills, attitudes, recovery, values, character, tactical skills, nutrition and other factors – including appropriate parental support – all play vitally important roles in helping swimmers to realise their full potential.

As Bob Bowman, coach of Michael Phelps said last year, “It used to be a matter of how many miles we could do and not break down. Now it’s what’s the least amount of training we can do but still win”.

I think – and I hope – that we are entering a new age in swimming coaching where “passion” replaces “pushing”, where “inspiration” replaces “insult” and where technique instruction, skill development, engagement and enjoyment matter more than lap counting and mile-measuring.

I have a lot of faith in the people who are at “coal-face” – that swimmers, parents and coaches can work together to create highly effective, engaging and enjoyable experiences for swimmers of all ages and levels of ability but it means letting go of some of the limited thinking and questionable behaviors that have limited our capacity to progress in the past.

Someone who would have made a great swimming coach once said, “Change is the law of life. And those who look only to the past or present are certain to miss the future” (JFK).

Thanks again for reading and for contributing to the discussion.

WG

Jan Bosci
Jan Bosci
9 years ago

Well said Sir! I am a Grandparent & observe my Granddaughter’s progress with complete amazement at her ability to keep on keeping on! Sport is expensive & coaches do need to consider that parents expect them to train accordingly. Parents need to remember that kids are not machines & if driven too hard too early will turn off when puberty hits. Tread carefully! I personally love watching these kids succeed & progress but worry at the same time if it is the best thing. They do need down time!

Swimming is our Life
Swimming is our Life
9 years ago

1. Doing it all for their kids.
Disagree. depending upon the age group, parents need to do these things for children until they are ready to do it for themselves.
2. Insist on coaching their kids in technical areas
Not always. When you have a coach who only focuses on his/her favorites, the ones that might add points to USA Swimming status, or a chance at Olympic fame, and ignores the rest, a dedicated parent with insight to new techniques should be welcome.
3. Listen to other parents talk about technical issues.
Parents who are more engaged than the team coach can tell you many things about how to help your swimmer improve. The article assumes all coaches are highly trained and experienced professional coaches. Sorry but there are many who are not.
4. Gossip
Whatever! Many coaches will not give you the time of day if your idea or question isn’t in line with their plan. How about sharing your plan with the parents? Don’t want to put it in writing or commit because it will change when you least expect it to.
5. Talk swimming all the time to their kids
Our kids walk through the museum in streamline form. If the swimmers are thinking about swimming, talk about swimming. If they are thinking about music, talk about music. This comment may be from a person who is not a parent of a swimmer who is also a musician and who love to fish.
6. Expect PRs every time their child swims
Do not know or care about what a PR is
7. Demand accelerated development
When a coach announces for example that swimmers will not move up due to capacity, or does not have a predefined age group progression, parents absolutely have the right to speak up about why their swimmer who (through statistics) should be in the next group is not moved or aged up.
8. Give race instructions to their kids
Really? If your coach is on deck and doesn’t get out of his/her chair to coach their swimmers, someone needs to do the job. Prefer the parent over the coach of another team.
9. Treat their children according to their child’s swimming performances
Wish our coaches followed this rule. Cursing at the swimmer in practice or at a meet should require immediate separation yet many clubs allow it, especially with older swimmers.
10. Try to talk to the coach on deck during workouts
When the coach has issued orders to swim x number of sets (watched touch the wall too many times) and is texting and face-booking on their cellphone, that is a perfect time to get their attention.

Martin
Martin
9 years ago

Looks like you need to find a new coach or become a coach on deck yourself

Gil
Gil
9 years ago

You are a coach’s nightmare parent!

Terri
9 years ago

This is what I love about swimming….coaches coach, doesn’t matter who the swimmer is or the team the swimmer is on. If a swimmer needs a coach, the coach will coach. LIke all things, I guess, not all coaches are as neutral as the ones we have come into contact with.

DrJack
DrJack
9 years ago

If swimming is your life. I would suggest to get a life. I would hate to be your daughters’ swim coach!

swimparent
swimparent
9 years ago

Couldn’t agree more with #4 and #7. Many coaches do just play favorites and only pay attention to the star swimmers. And not every family has other programs available nearby.

Shari Berry
9 years ago

This is brilliant!!!!

Kristie Wisniewski
9 years ago

I am my kids main coach so it’s hard to avoid all of those.

Shazza Sheppa
9 years ago

Can I say, as much as we like to think we don’t, sometimes we do, as long as we as parents are aware then we can change.

Tom Cooney
9 years ago

Good Advice. But as a long-time swimming parent, and former coach, I’ve had to gently coach my kids – on our own time – when the age group coaches weren’t getting it done. Mostly for coaches that didn’t pay enough (at times none for weeks!) attention to technique. (Not so much a problem for high school and above.)

Jocil Albertyn
9 years ago
Reply to  Tom Cooney

Amen!! Bring back SXD!:)

Sara Sordi
9 years ago

I don’t do any of these! Wheeew!

Shazza Sheppa
9 years ago

I like it.

Jocelyne Humbert O'Kane

OK I wasnt so bad

Casey Smiley
9 years ago

Ugh! So true! And it’s even more fun when the coaches have to fill out an incident report for the police about one swim parent attacking another during practice!

Suzanne Williams
9 years ago

Not just swimming 🙂

Candice Albertyn
9 years ago

I love number 9. So true of anything, not just swimming

Annalise Marais
9 years ago

Interesting read!

Mike Chadwick
Mike Chadwick
9 years ago

Ok thats all right…..But there is also the 10 things Coaches do that parents cant stand.

Jocil Albertyn
9 years ago

Let me see…..:)

Nicola Baynes
9 years ago

Love number 9

Amy Baker
9 years ago

Glad I don’t do ANY of these. Love swim, but know my place!!

Christina Kaklamani
9 years ago

Advices!!!!

Rocio Tomas
9 years ago

Same in schools!

Diana Lundquist
9 years ago

Coleen Lively…I love this list! I know your kids swim so I am forwarding it to you!

Coleen Lively
9 years ago

Haha! I can actually say I do none of these but I agree it is totally annoying-especially the gossipers. Quit talking about everyone else’s kids and go away!!

Hanna Miller
9 years ago

This is awesome 🙂 Jessica Chen Sergio Ruiz

Una Hunter
9 years ago

Lindsey Jane Nicol….for Douglas, not you obviously

Amanda Nicol
9 years ago

Shawn Nicol Ashley Nicol

Shawn Nicol
9 years ago
Reply to  Amanda Nicol

Hmmmm might be guilty of a few

Héctor Rosario
9 years ago

Verónica del Mar

Verónica del Mar
9 years ago

I read it as a swimmer, not as a parent 😉

Sara Lucic
9 years ago

Emma Lucic Edita Lucic Davor GarantSarajlija Lucic

Edita Lucic
9 years ago
Reply to  Sara Lucic

Hahahah

Heather Starner Dougherty

Kelsy Richardson Ken Chandler

Louise Ruiterman
9 years ago

Sounds familiar Holley Hogan

John Diffendale
9 years ago

Dana Diffendale Kellie Wilbert Drummond

Treena Skeggs-Grant
9 years ago

Ian Skeggs-Grant

Maged Bazina
9 years ago

Emy Ahmad

Rick Balfour
9 years ago

Lynda Balfour

Lynda Balfour
9 years ago
Reply to  Rick Balfour

I am the ideal parent- I drop her off and pick her up!

Rick Balfour
9 years ago
Reply to  Rick Balfour

She always will…

Sophie Taylor
9 years ago

Paul Taylor

Cody Broad
9 years ago

Dawn Broad

Jessica Aldrich
9 years ago

Connie Craddock

Emily Abraham
9 years ago

Tracy Abraham Was Constable

Shannon Mazzarelle
9 years ago

Camille Anderson

Camille Anderson
9 years ago

Nice we should post on our site. BTW, Paul talks to me..hehehe giving me work..

Lauren Doughton
9 years ago

Phil Pkswimschool Samantha Wyllie

Andrew Catchpole
9 years ago

Geraldine Manser

Geraldine Manser
9 years ago

Are you saying I am committing all or some of these crimes? Yes, I guess I do. Hopefully not too badly

emilysdoucette
emilysdoucette
4 years ago

Sarah E. Ellitt Make 6150 bucks every month… Start doing online computer-based work through our website. I have been working from home for 4 years now and I love it. I don’t have a boss standing over my shoulder and I make my own hours. iⅭ­a­s­h­68­.Ⅽ­O­Ⅿ

Emily Metituk
9 years ago

Jennifer Metituk

Wendy
Wendy
9 years ago

I think it’s called balance . Some parents may be like this bit not all . I agree with previous comments what about the 10 most hates points by parents . I’m a parent and a coach abd I hold down a full time job so here goes –
Parents have to get then out if the door in time to meet the days schedules so therefore if it works to sock bags and also get them ready for school next morning way not – I do it a few times a week for my two and guess what they are A students !!!
Coaches know better than anyone , no need for extra critique , swim camps , new learning or possible areas of imotivrnt spotted by parents or supported by parents . always room to learn .
Patents foot the bills , monthly fees , meet entries hotels food , kit they are the customer and therefore expect a level of services. The way parents are viewed by parents is not actual swimmereally in line with this is it ? I wonder if it was added up an annual cost why it would be deemed unreasonable to want results , improvement and regardless if level if success celebrate that ALL parties have achieved that SWimmer , coach and parents .
So if coaches stopped writing and saying how much they dislike patents perhaps the funding , support and assist what might be more valued !

Lyn 'Lulu' Johnson
9 years ago

And when I was teaching beginners and all the Mums sat there + chatted away when they were supposed to be helping or at least watching their little babes but they were talking so loud I sent them all out as they were distracting + kids could concentrate without them there!!!!!

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