Swim schools and learner-pool environments serve the youngest and most-vulnerable end of the UK pool user population — babies, toddlers, parent-and-child sessions, beginner swim education. The slip-risk profile reflects this through tighter PTV targets, more rigorous periodic testing, and operational considerations specific to the parent-supervised non-swimmer environment.
The user population includes:
Working PTV targets for swim-school environments are PTV 40+ wet (Slider 55) across the main learner-pool surround, with 45+ at steps, beach entries and the immediate splash zone.
Swim-school sessions for babies and toddlers typically include a hand-over moment — the parent passes the child to the swim instructor (or vice versa) at the pool-side. This concentrated movement under wet conditions is a foreseeable risk zone, particularly because:
For swim-school venues we test hand-over zones as discrete locations with PTV 45+ (Slider 55) as the working target.
Swim-school venues often have specialist parent-and-child changing facilities — family changing rooms, baby-changing benches, double cubicles, pram-storage zones. These environments combine:
Periodic testing of parent-and-child changing facilities is part of standard swim-school venue programmes.
Babies and toddlers swim in warmer water than older children — typical learner pool water temperatures of 30–32°C versus 27–28°C for general leisure pools. The higher water temperature accelerates surface-chemistry reactions on the surrounding deck, with:
Periodic testing of warm-water learner pools should be at higher frequency than equivalent leisure-pool surrounds.
Swim-school operators face particularly rigorous insurer scrutiny because the user population is acknowledged-vulnerable. UKAS-accredited periodic pendulum data is increasingly an explicit requirement of public-liability cover for commercial swim-school operations.
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