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Nassau Lifeguard Courses Announced

Aquatic Center features lifeguard instruction classes beginning this month.

The 2013 lifeguard instruction courses have been announced at Nassau County Aquatic Center in East Meadow.

Lifeguard Instruction Course No. 1:

Registration starts: Feb. 11, 8 a.m.

Pre-Test: Feb. 28, 5 p.m. (1st class takes place after pre-test)

Class day and time: Thursdays from 5-8:30 p.m.

Dates: Feb. 28-May 2

Cost: $250 (includes class/book/materials) plus a $5 class registration fee

Lifeguard Instruction Course No. 2:

Registration starts: Feb 11, 8 a.m.

Pre-Test: Feb 28, 5 p.m.

Class day and time: Sundays from 12-4:30 p.m.

Dates: March 3-April 28

Cost: $250 (includes class/book/materials) plus a $5 class registration fee

Details:

  • Participants must be at least 16 years old before the last date of the class.
  • Registrants must pass a pre-test in order to participate in the class.  Pre-test requirements are listed below.
  • Registration is first come, first serve.  Class size is limited to 10 spots. A Nassau County Leisure Pass is required at the time of registration.
  • After 10 spots are filled, a waitlist will be formed to fill in any pre-test failures.  There is no fee to be placed on the waitlist.
  • The $250 fee to be paid before the first class starts but only after passing the pre-test.
  • No absences are permitted.  Registration and program fees are non-refundable. 

Pre-Test Requirements:

  • Swim 300 yards continuously using only these strokes in the following order: 100 yards front crawl using rhythmic breathing and a stabilizing propellant kick; 100 yards of breaststroke using a pull, breathe, kick and glide sequence; and 100 yards of either front crawl using rhythmic breathing or breaststroke.  These 100 yards may be a mixture of front crawl and breaststroke. (Note: There is no time requirement for this skill.  The participant must show only that he or she can swim 300 yards using the above strokes without stopping).
  • Starting in the water, swim 20 yards using front crawl or breaststroke; surface dive to a depth of 7-10 feet of water, retrieve a 10-pound object, return to the surface, and swim 20 yards back to the starting point with the object and exit the water without using a ladder or steps, within 1 minute, 40 seconds.  The time is complete once the participant has exited the water and is standing up on the pool deck. 

Lifeguard Prep Class:

Registration starts: Feb. 11, 8 a.m.

Class day and time: Thursdays from 5:30-6:30 p.m.

Dates: Feb. 28-May 2

Cost: $55 plus a $5 registration fee 

Details:

  • Participants must be between the ages of 13-15.
  • Participants must be able to perform the same pre-test requirements listed for the lifeguard instruction course and/or must have completed Level 6 of the Learn to Swim program.
  • Registration is first come, first serve.  Class size is limited to 10 spots.
  • A Nassau County Leisure Pass is required at the time of registration.

Note: Schedules are subject to change. 

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Bojames May 17, 2013 at 08:15 pm
All above by the original writer notwithstanding it is morally reprehensible that people who did ,Read More do not, would not send their children to public school but rather private school, religious or secular, sit on a public school board of education. They are there for one reason only ;to keep taxes as low as possible because those that elect them carry private school tuition. That is NOT an acceptable reason to direct/control/guide the education of public school students. Any position put forward that disputes this as the basis for parents of private school students being on a BOE is a lie.
Tova Markowitz May 17, 2013 at 05:18 pm
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Chris Albanese May 17, 2013 at 04:05 pm
It's not just the teachers... As a parent of 2 going on 3 school aged children, I'm amazed at howRead More much our free public schools cost. We get a supply list every year of things like crayons and pencils which I get, although I don't see why it HAS to be crayola. The red crayon in the box from the 99 cents store is just as red as the one in the $4 box from someplace else. Also, I don't understand why I need to send in 4 boxes of tissues, paper towels, wipes, etc per child. When I was a kid, I remember keeping a little pack of kleenex in my desk for when I needed it. I'm sure the district can buy in bulk at half the cost to us and store it in the schools until needed. Also, as far as the teachers go, I'm not sure if they do it on LI, but when I was a SBM in the NYC DOE, we had what was called Teacher's Choice which was a check for $250 that every teacher would get on March 15 (?) to help pay for the classroom supplies they bought throughout the year. It always amazed me how many of the "supplies" were purchased on 03/14. I had the pleasure of denying some of the more bogus expenses. Also, anything they would spend above and beyond their reimbursement is now tax deductible I believe. My wife, sister, cousin and many friends were and some still are classroom teachers. I know firsthand how the good ones give much more than they get in their check(s). The trick is to weed out the ones that are only in it for the money, benefits and summers off and not the kids.
lilly May 14, 2013 at 02:18 pm
I do not understand how we never have a year with NO TAX INCREASES!!!!! It is pretty sad- we have toRead More get new resources, get more project bids and simply learn to say no or tighten up and not spend and what about salary freezes! We are all living with these types of challenges. We are living through difficult times. When I look around the town and see so many homes and stores for rent and sale- it should be a lightbulb moment. We can't continue to live this way. People will keep leaving the neighborhood and that's really not good for any of us!
Luncheon at Mother Kelly's
paul May 11, 2013 at 11:25 pm
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