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            The importance of lessons on water safety for children 
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            [May 
			03, 2013] 
            Lazy summer days are just around 
			the corner for school kids. For many, that will mean recreation in 
			or around swimming pools, and for a few it will be time around 
			lakes, rivers or ponds. | 
        
            |  Would your children know what to do if they were to find themselves 
			struggling in water or saw someone else struggling? It has been the mission of a Chester-East Lincoln teacher to help 
			children know how to be safe in the water and how to possibly help 
			someone in trouble.  Mrs. Marge Aper has been conducting water safety and swim lessons 
			for third-graders for the past 38 years. Every spring the students 
			have been brought to the Lincoln College pool for lessons that teach 
			them to think and to practice what they've learned in and around 
			water.  The program began out of a tragedy. On the last day of school in 
			1974, a wonderful CEL student went home to begin his summer 
			vacation. But that day fourth-grader Jimmy Huff drowned in a pond.
			 
			
			 It was a terrible thing and Mrs. Aper was saddened, along with 
			many others. She felt she had to do something. The next year, with 
			the help of Lehn & Fink, she began the water safety program.  On the last day of lessons each year, parents are invited to come 
			and see a demonstration of the skills their children have gained.
			 On Tuesday this week, Mrs. Aper reviewed for the parents the 
			practical measures the children had learned and practiced, such as 
			not to go into the water to help someone unless they became a 
			trained lifeguard. What they could do would be to reach out an arm 
			or something else for a person to grab hold of, like a pole, branch, 
			net or towel, and they practiced how to stand while doing it.  
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			 The parents were also delighted to see how their children's swim 
			skills had progressed. Mrs. Aper emphasized techniques that could be used in the water 
			if the swimmer were to become tired: holding breath with face in the 
			water for 10 seconds at a time, floating, rolling over from back to 
			front and front to back, and bobbing skills. All of the children 
			were accomplished in these simple, potentially lifesaving skills. As the exhibition progressed, it was clear that all of her 
			students had learned a lot and that they really enjoyed being in the 
			water. This showed especially when free time came. Many went to the 
			diving boards, both high and low, where there was a steady parade of 
			jumpers. Some swimmers stayed in the shallower end, playing with 
			rings, jumping, diving and playing. This was Mrs. Aper's last presentation of this very important 
			program that has meant so much to many families over the years. She 
			thanked the Lincoln College students who had assisted her with the 
			program. She said they were wonderful to work with. 
[LDN] 
			
			Ten water safety rules |