The Benefits of Infant Swimming

By the age of three, a child’s brain has reached almost 90% of its adult size

A baby’s brain is a fragile sponge. Babies are completely dependent on their parents as a means to build resilience and strength for their years to come.

It’s up to us to give babies the loving trust needed for their brain to create 100 billion brain cell connections.

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Safer.

Reduces the risk of drowning

  • Participation in formal swimming lessons can reduce the risk of drowning by 88% among children aged 1 to 4 years

  • Swimming lessons should be considered for inclusion as part of a complete prevention program 

The founders:

Dr. Ruth Brenner and her colleagues of the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development in Bethesda, Md

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In China…
In a case-controlled study in rural China, Dr. L. Yang and his associates reported a 40% reduction in drowning risk in open bodies of water for children participating in formal swimming lessons

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Stronger.

Improves motor development

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  • Baby swimmers develop better balance, movement, and grasping techniques than non-swimmers

  • This difference persisted even when the children were 5-years-old; baby swimmers still outperformed their peers in these skills

The founders:

Dr. Hermundur Sigmundsson and his colleagues at Norwegian University of Science and Technology

In North America…

  • Baby swimmers, ages 16 to 20-months-old, made considerable gains in movement required for turning 180° and reaching for a wall while underwater

  • The researchers concluded that buoyancy most likely boosted the infant's motor development

The founders:

Philip R. Zelazo from McGill University and Michael J. Weiss 

In Germany…

  • Early year round swimming lessons for young children accelerated their development physically, intellectually, and emotionally

  • Compared with a control group which did not take year-round lessons, the children who swam consistently from infancy were significantly stronger and more coordinated

The founders:

Scientific studies at the German Sports College Cologne

In Australia…

Moving in high water resistance strengthened the children's muscles more rapidly than playing on the floor because swimming activates more large muscle groups

The founders:

Griffith University


Smarter.

Accelerates cognitive development

  • Children under the age of 5 involved in swimming lessons are more advanced in their cognitive and physical development than their non-swimming peers

  • Minor benefits to social and language development

  • Children who were taught to swim by the age of 5 had statistically higher IQs

The founders:

Griffith University

In 2009, the study was funded by swim schools across Australia, New Zealand, and the United States. It was a 4 year study called Early Years Swimming Research Project with 45 swim schools.

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Increases memory capacity

  • The amount of a person's movement and exercise affects the size and memory capacity of their hippocampus

    • The hippocampus is an area of the human brain primarily associated with memory and learning

  • The number of neurons in the hippocampus of humans increased in a controlled exercise program

The founders:

Bogdan Draganski and Christian Gaser with the Journal of Neuroscience

Their study was focused on observing an increased number of neurons in the hippocampus of humans in a controlled exercise program


In North America…

  • Higher fit people have a bigger hippocampus

  • More tissue in the hippocampus equates with increased ability in certain types of memory

The founders:

Art Kramer and his colleagues at the University of Illinois and the University of Pittsburgh

 


Expands cerebral communication

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The founder:

Paul E. Dennison, creator of Brain Gym

  • A baby's brain develops through bilateral cross patterning movements like swimming, crawling, and walking

  • The more cross patterning movements, the more nerve fibres develop in the corpus callosum in the brain

    • The corpus callosum facilitates communication, feedback, and modulation from one side of the brain to the other

  • Cross patterning movements, like swimming, activate both cerebral hemispheres and all 4 lobes of the brain simultaneously, which can result in heightened cognition and increase ease of learning

    • Good communication in the cerebral hemispheres leads to overall efficiency in brain processes, while poor interaction slows down language development and academic learning

 

Enhances neurological development

  • Children experience a great deal of tactile stimulation from water’s resistance over the entire body while swimming, encouraging neurological development

  • Water has over 600 times the resistance of air

  • Tactile experiences and interactions in the water are important for overall neural organization

  • Infants make significant gains in neurological development, weight gain, and mental development from the tactile stimulation of the nerve pathways of the skin and vestibular nerve cells

The founder:

Dr. Ruth Rice

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And…

  • Swimming children scored higher for intelligence and problem solving, which carried over into excellence in academic achievement

  • Emotionally, they were found to have more self-discipline, greater self-control, and an increased desire to succeed

  • They rated higher in self-esteem, were more independent and comfortable in social situations than the control groups

The founders:

Scientific studies at the German Sports College Cologne


Prepared.

Strengthens social confidence

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  • Children who had taken part in baby swimming lessons from the age of 2 months to 4 years were better adapted to new situations and had more self confidence and independence than non-swimmers

  • Swim class has abundant opportunities to share space with other children and to explore movement together

  • The child cooperates within a social structure to learn by observing and mimicking those around them

  • Being part of a group also contributes to the child's social development

The founders:

Dr. Liselott Diem and her colleagues


Nurtured.

Early bonding and resilient children

  • The most important stage for brain development is the beginning of life, starting in the womb and then the first year of life

  • The experiences a baby has with her caregivers are crucial to this early wiring and pruning and enable millions and millions of new connections in the brain to be made

  • Repeated interactions and communication lead to pathways being laid down that help memories and relationships form

The founders:

Rima Shore - Families and Work Inst., New York, NY


Skin-to-skin…

  • Skin-to-skin provides the emotional nourishment a baby needs to feel attachment, connection, and commitment

The founders:

The Academy of Pediatrics

  • Positively benefit full-term infants and their mothers during the postpartum period

  • Infants’ left frontal area of the brain is stimulated

    • Implicating a higher cognitive and emotional regulatory skills

  • Both mother and infant showed increased oxytocin, along with decreases in stress reactivity

    • The ability to regulate the feelings of stress are prompted by experiences with positive caregiving in infancy

The founders:

Florida Atlantic University

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Building trust…

  • Relationships that a child experiences daily and the environments in which those relationships are made make up the building blocks of the brain

  • By parents/caregivers participating in learning experiences with their baby shapes the child’s brains to function in the physical, social, and linguistic environments of those who care for them

  • Babies learn, largely by attending to their caregivers’ modelling, how to feel, think, and act.

  • Babies are dependent on relationships with their caregiver for physical survival, emotional security, a safe base for learning, help with self-regulation, modelling and mentoring social behavior, and information and exchanges about the workings of the world and rules for living

The founders:

J.R. Lally, P.L. Mangione, & D. Greenwald

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