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Adapted Aquatics

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Title: Active, Healthy Lifestyles for All: Thinking About Philosophy Author: Deborah Buswell Last modified by: Deborah Buswell Created Date: 9/24/2003 1:26:52 PM – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Adapted Aquatics


1
Adapted Aquatics
  • Chapter 17

2
Introduction
  • Benefits
  • Physical and mental rehabilitation
  • Fitness
  • Relaxation
  • Perceptual-motor intervention
  • Self-concept enhancement
  • Fun
  • Competition
  • Ease of movement

3
Aquatic Therapy
  • Aquatic therapy - water exercises adapted for
    therapeutic purposes
  • Common goals
  • Improve circulation, muscular strength, and
    endurance
  • Improve range of motion, balance, and coordination

4
Aquatic Therapy
  • Taught by specialists in hydrotherapy
  • Developed in 1930s - Charles Lowman father of
    hydrotherapy
  • Initially for persons with physical disabilities
    - now recommended for everyone

5
Adapted Aquatics
  • Service delivery system for providing appropriate
    aquatic instruction and participation for persons
    with disabilities
  • Taught by certified swimming instructors with
    additional specialized training
  • Provides instructional modifications for swimming
    activities

6
Instructional Models for Beginners
  • Red Cross and YMCA programs
  • Halliwick Water Confidence Model
  • Sherrill Water Fun and Success Model

7
Halliwick Water Confidence Model
  • Teaches water buoyancy and confidence through
    various kinds of body rotations, floats, glides,
    and games
  • Moves on to traditional methods to learn strokes

8
10 Points in Halliwick Model
  • Mental preparation
  • Self-sufficiency
  • Vertical rotation
  • Horizontal or lateral rotation
  • Combined rotation
  • Application of buoyancy
  • Floating positions
  • Turbulence floating and gliding
  • Simple propulsion
  • Development of strokes

9
Sherrill Water Fun and Success Model
  • Major goals of the program
  • Improve self-concept
  • Increase self-confidence
  • Develop courage
  • Secondary goals of the program
  • Identification of body parts
  • Improvement of proprioception
  • Development of inner language concepts

10
Sherrill Water Fun and Success Model
  • Participants can earn prebeginner swimming
    certificates at three levels
  • Explorer - release teachers hand and perform
    basic locomotor movement patterns independently
  • Advanced Explorer - put face in water and lift
    feet from bottom of pool
  • Floater - relax and float for several seconds

11
Similarities in the Models
  • One-to-one teaching ratio until swimmers gain
    confidence for small group instruction
  • Teachers in the water simulating and supporting
    swimmers
  • Learning through play and games
  • Emphasis on body awareness, movement exploration,
    and breathing games
  • Consideration of buoyancy principles
  • Generally no use of personal flotation devices

12
Adapted Aquatics Principles
  • Teachers are in the water with students
  • Avoid saying put your face underwater,
    introduce gamelike situations to get the child to
    attempt the task
  • Use as few words as possible in teaching
  • Move the childs limbs through desired patterns
    instead of explanation-demonstration

13
Adapted Aquatics Principles
  • Show acceptance of the child through frequent
    mirroring of movements
  • Synchronized swimming, jumping, and diving
    introduced early
  • Modify requirements in accordance with
    differences
  • Encourage bilateral, unilateral, and crosslateral
    movement patterns

14
Bilateral and Crosslateral Basics
  • Introduce breaststroke and elementary backstroke
    first
  • Teach bilateral movements on land first
  • Crosslateral strokes are difficult to master
  • Teach in horizontal position
  • Teach leg kick first then arm stroke

15
Activities for the Explorer
  • Washcloth games - compare to bathtub at home
  • Sponge games
  • Parachute games - similar activities to using
    parachutes on land
  • Blowing games - play in or out of the water,
    leading to rhythmic breathing

16
Self-Testing Activities - Explorer
  • Horizontal or long jump
  • Vertical jump and reach
  • Cable jump
  • Greet the toe
  • Jump and tuck
  • Straight arm support
  • Aquatic sprint
  • Bracketing with back lean
  • Matching locomotor movements to lines and forms
  • Airplane or single foot balance

17
Activities for the Advanced Explorer
  • Towel games
  • Learn to use body shapes such as tuck, pike,
    layout, and curved positions
  • Learn various ways to enter the water
  • Bracketing
  • Retrieving objects from the bottom of the pool

18
Self-Testing Activities - Advanced Explorer
  • Frog jump
  • Jack-in-the-box
  • Dog walks
  • Mule kick
  • Seal walk
  • Camel walk
  • Egg sit followed by V sit
  • Human ball bounce
  • Coffee grinder
  • Knee scale

19
Activities for the Floater
  • Horizontal to vertical positioning
  • Floating
  • Bobbing
  • Front-to-back positioning and vice versa
  • Simple stunts in synchronized swimming

20
Floating Principles
  • Buoyancy is the quality of being able to float
  • Depends on displacement and weight
  • Explained by Archimedes principle

21
Floating Principles
  • Specific gravity is weight of a person compared
    to the weight of an equal amount of water
  • After full inspiration slightly less than 1
  • After exhalation slightly more than 1
  • Difficulty in floating exists when specific
    gravity is above 1.02

22
Floating Principles
  • Center of buoyance is the center of gravity of
    the volume of the displaced water before
    displacement
  • Area where weight is concentrated when in the
    water
  • Generally in the thoracic cavity
  • Obesity lowers the center of buoyance

23
Coping with Problems of Buoyancy
  • Below-average buoyancy
  • Above-average buoyancy
  • Amputations
  • Spasticity and asymmetric strength
  • Bobbing
  • Finning and sculling

24
Below-Average Buoyancy
  • Raising center of gravity raises center of
    buoyancy
  • Extend arms over head
  • Bend knees with heels toward buttocks
  • Assume a tuck position
  • Hyperventilate
  • Common in men and Blacks

25
Above-Average Buoyancy
  • Difficulty in moving from a horizontal to a
    vertical position
  • Alternate-arm strokes are difficult because body
    wants to roll and feet and legs may be out of
    water preventing a kick
  • Common in individuals who are obese

26
Amputations
  • Affects location of center of gravity and center
    of buoyance
  • Displaces CG and CB to opposite side and causes
    rolling
  • Suggested strokes to learn depend on amputation

27
Spasticity and Asymmetric Strength
  • Tendency to spin or rotate in horizontal water
    position
  • Stabilize by turning head in opposite direction
    of body rotation
  • Teach backstrokes first
  • Master symmetric strokes first

28
Bobbing
  • Like a vertical jump on land except using arms
    for power
  • Improves rhythmic breathing
  • Increase vital breathing capacity
  • Heightens proprioceptive awareness
  • Serves as a warm-up activity
  • Many variations

29
Finning and Skulling
  • Focus on using arms and hands for changing
    positions in the water
  • Finning - series of short pushes with palms of
    the hands against the water
  • Skulling - figure-eight motions of the hands
    close to the surface of the water

30
Synchronized Swimming Stunts
  • Benefits of learning stunts
  • Improves proprioception
  • Enhances body awareness
  • Provide practice in movement imitation
  • Prerequisites for learning stunts
  • Ease in water
  • Sculling ability while floating
  • Keen sense of where body is in space

31
Synchronized Swimming Stunts
  • Stunts taught progressively
  • Tuck easier than pike or layout positions
  • Various stunts to teach students
  • Stunts that begin in a back layout position
  • Stunts that begin in a front layout position
  • Methods for rolling in the water from back to
    front or vice versa

32
Stroke Technique for Swimmers with Disabilities
  • Optimal stroke techniques may need to be adjusted
    for swimmers with disabilities
  • Reducing resistance
  • Increasing propulsion

33
Reducing Resistance
  • Resistance or drag refers to water forces that
    cause the swimmer to slow down
  • Reduce cross-sectional area by using streamlined
    body shapes
  • Becomes more important at faster speeds

34
Reducing Form Drag
  • Achieve longest shape possible
  • Taper the body - smaller at hands and feet
  • Create as rounded a body shape as possible
  • Minimize cross-sectional area
  • Overall size of body
  • Adjustment of stroke technique
  • Horizontal and lateral alignment
  • Shoulder/hip roll

35
Reducing Wave Drag
  • Caused by turbulence at the water surface
  • Contributors
  • Poor stroke technique
  • Other swimmers
  • Depth of water
  • Weather conditions

36
Reducing Friction Drag
  • Refers to the force needed for water to slip past
    the body
  • More friction at surface of water than underwater
  • Wearing a swimming cap and tight-fitting swimming
    suit as well as shaving parts of the body reduce
    friction drag

37
Increasing Propulsion
  • Forces created by the swimmer that make the body
    move forward in the water
  • Generation of propulsion affected by
  • Hand/foot shapes
  • Angle of attack
  • Direction of movement

38
Increasing Propulsion
  • Hand/foot shapes
  • Hands - slightly curved with fingers together
  • Feet - depends on stroke
  • Angle of attack
  • Angle of hand in comparison to the direction of
    movement - ideal is 40

39
Increasing Propulsion
  • Direction of movement
  • Refers to the arm and leg positions used for
    various strokes
  • Exert pressure against the water opposite the
    desired direction of movement
  • Pulling under the center of gravity
  • Symmetry

40
Teaching Stroke Technique to Swimmers with
Disabilities
  • Start with assessment
  • Use results to develop instruction objectives
  • Determine appropriate equipment to use
  • Modify stroke techniques if necessary
  • Focus always on the individual

41
Aquatic Sports and Leisure Activities
  • Motives for participation
  • Fun
  • Skill development
  • Fitness and health
  • Competition, excitement, and challenge
  • Socialization

42
Skill Development
  • Enables participation in various aquatic
    activities
  • Various programs available
  • Aquatic physical therapy emphasis different than
    swimming techniques
  • Muscle relaxation in warm water
  • Less stress on joints

43
Competitive Swimming
  • Inclusive environments
  • Access to knowledgeable coaches
  • Good facilities
  • Frequent nearby competitions
  • Support and friendship from teammates
  • Various competitive swimming programs

44
Competitive Swimming
  • Disability-specific programs
  • Access to knowledgeable coaches
  • Good facilities
  • Teammates that share disability culture
  • Various competitive swimming programs for
    specific disabilities or groupings of disabilities

45
Other Aquatic Activities
  • Synchronized swimming
  • Diving
  • Water polo
  • Scuba diving
  • Sailing
  • Rowing
  • Canoeing/kayaking

46
Safety
  • Certifications
  • Emergency action plan
  • Safety inspections
  • First aid supplies
  • Adequate supervision
  • Safety skills
  • Safety rules
  • Prerequisite skills
  • Precautions related to disability-related health
    concerns
  • Personal flotation devices
  • Personal safety and liability

47
Disability Accommodations
  • ADA requirements
  • Commonsense, reasonable accommodations for
    persons with disabilities that enable
    participation and promote full and equal
    enjoyment of activities
  • Facility accommodations
  • Programming accommodations

48
Facility Accommodations
  • Minimize or eliminate safety risks
  • Emergency action plan and evacuation plans
  • Nonskid, uncluttered deck
  • Avoid sharp or rough surfaces
  • Pool depth clearly marked
  • Easy to use access (i.e., lifts, ramps, steps)
  • Water temperature
  • Locker rooms to accommodate various disabilities

49
Programming Accommodations
  • Reasonable accommodations to programs
  • Considerations for contraindications for swimming
  • Minimizing risks and informed decisions
  • Adaptations to curriculum
  • Adaptations for instruction
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