Pool environment

School Pool Testing

School pools serve a particularly vulnerable user population — children, often non-swimmers, with reduced reactive balance and varying degrees of pool-side awareness. The slip-risk profile is correspondingly elevated, the safeguarding scrutiny is rigorous, and the pendulum test provides the documentary evidence that pool-side floor compliance has been independently verified.

School pool environments

UK school pools span a wide range:

  • Independent school pools — often dedicated 25m or 33m teaching/competition pools, frequently with separate hydrotherapy or learner pool
  • Academy and trust-level pools — academy chains operating multi-site portfolios with pools at flagship sites
  • State school pools (where present) — older 20m or 25m teaching pools, often dating to 1960s–1970s build
  • SEN and special-school hydrotherapy pools — smaller, warmer, with substantial mobility-aid provision

The testing methodology is consistent — UKAS pendulum with Slider 55 and Rz where required — but the operational context and contractual references differ.

Safeguarding context

School pool slip-risk management sits within a broader safeguarding framework. Independent UKAS-accredited pendulum data is the documentary evidence that pool-side floor compliance has been verified by an independent body, complementing the in-house safeguarding records, the lifeguarding rotas, and the supervision-ratio compliance.

For independent schools facing ISI inspection or for state schools facing Ofsted, periodic pendulum data forms part of the operational records that inspection routinely reviews under premises and safeguarding heads.

Pool slip claims from school pupils

Where a school pupil slips on a pool surround, the legal framework is the same as any other premises slip claim — the Occupiers' Liability Act 1957 and the Health and Safety at Work Act 1974. Case law has developed specifically around the foreseeability of running children, wet feet, and the rapid contamination cycles in a school pool environment.

The claim is typically brought through the parent/guardian. Defending the claim rests on the same evidence-of-reasonable-practicable-steps framework as any other premises claim — pre-incident periodic pendulum data is the strongest documentary contribution.

Multi-academy trust portfolios

For multi-academy trusts running pool sites across several schools, periodic pendulum testing across the portfolio provides:

  • Trust-level documentary evidence of pool-floor compliance management
  • Site-level reports for each individual school's safeguarding file
  • Comparable methodology between sites so portfolio-level patterns can be identified
  • Insurance documentation for the trust's public-liability cover

Hydrotherapy pools in special schools

SEN and special schools often operate hydrotherapy pools used by pupils with significant physical disabilities. Pool-side surfaces are subject to particularly rigorous testing because:

  • Many pupils use mobility aids that interact with the floor differently to ambulatory feet
  • Pool-side staff frequently support pupils physically — a pupil's slip may pull a member of staff down
  • Hoist transfer points are concentrated zones of higher slip risk
  • Pool steps may be supplemented or replaced with ramped beach entries

For these environments, PTV 40+ wet using Slider 55 is the working baseline, with higher targets at hoist transfer points and ramped entries.

Termly and seasonal patterns

School pool use is highly seasonal — intensive during term, reduced or absent during holidays. Cleaning regimes, water-treatment cycles and the operational state of the pool deck vary correspondingly. Periodic testing is most useful when scheduled mid-term to capture realistic operational conditions, not during holidays when the deck is in best condition.

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