The Role & Expectations
The work is planning and running lessons, demonstrating strokes and techniques, building confidence in the water and keeping everyone safe, often with young children. Patience, clear instruction and a calm, reassuring manner matter hugely, since you teach people who may be frightened of the water and safety is always the priority.
Hours often include after-school, evenings and weekends to suit learners, the work is active and spent poolside in warm, humid conditions, and pay commonly starts around the minimum wage and rises with experience. Many instructors work for pools, schools or clubs, and some teach privately.
You need a recognised swimming teaching qualification, gained through a course, plus first aid and often a lifesaving or water safety award. An enhanced DBS check is required as you usually work with children, and ongoing training keeps your teaching safe and current.
Daily Responsibilities
- Plan and run swimming lessons
- Demonstrate strokes and techniques
- Build swimmers' confidence in the water
- Keep learners safe at all times
- Adapt lessons to age and ability
- Track each learner's progress
- Set up and check pool equipment