If you would like a creative way to
teach Butterfly to young children (ages 4 - 12), this article will share a few
creative, and easy steps to teach the butterfly stroke.
Steps
- Have your young student(s) lay on their stomach on the deck. Their arms should be at their sides, thumbs down, pinky side of the hand up.
- Say to your students, "I want you to pretend you are a "caterpillar." We call this position (with their arms at their sides) the caterpillar position.
- Say to your students, "Now I want you to slowly move your arms forward, keeping, your thumbs down, and pretend that you are changing from a caterpillar into a butterfly."
- Say to your students, "I want you to stop moving your arms when they get in front of your shoulders, which is where the arms enter the water."
- Practice this movement several times until your students have a clear understanding of what the stroke/recovery of the arms should feel like. Then you can teach the pull.
- Have your young students practice the arm recovery and pull with a buoyancy device. It works well. Why? because the child can concentrate on the technique without worrying about staying on top of the water.
- The late legendary Olympic Swimming Coach Richard Quick would have advanced swimmers do the same drill while lying on a kickboard in the the water. Use a similar technique with younger swimmers learning the butterfly.
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