Swimming | Definition, History, Strokes, & Facts | Britannica

Instruction and training

Swimming for recreation1 of 3
Swimming for recreationSeveral women preparing to dive into an indoor swimming pool, 1936.(more)
Johnny Weissmuller2 of 3
Johnny WeissmullerAmerican freestyle swimmer Johnny Weissmuller at a meet, 1924.(more)
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Modern Olympic swimming poolThe National Aquatic Center pool and audience seating at the 2008 Beijing Olympics.(more)

The earliest instruction programs were in Great Britain in the 19th century, both for sport and for lifesaving. Those programs were copied in the rest of Europe. In the United States swimming instruction for lifesaving purposes began under the auspices of the American Red Cross in 1916. Instructional work done by the various branches of the armed forces during both World Wars I and II was very effective in promoting swimming. Courses taught by community organizations and schools, extending ultimately to very young infants, became common.

Man swimming the butterfly stroke in pool.  (swimmer; athlete) Britannica Quiz Water Sports Quiz

The early practice of simply swimming as much as possible at every workout was replaced by interval training and repeat training by the late 1950s. Interval training consists of a series of swims of the same distance with controlled rest periods. In slow interval training, used primarily to develop endurance, the rest period is always shorter than the time taken to swim the prescribed distance. Fast interval training, used primarily to develop speed, permits rest periods long enough to allow almost complete recovery of the heart and breathing rate.

Key People: Pablo Morales Eleanor Holm Katie Ledecky Emma McKeon Sophie Pascoe (Show more) Related Topics: distance swimming sidestroke 100-meter backstroke race swimming pool medley (Show more) See all related content

The increased emphasis on international competition led to the growing availability of 50-meter (164-foot) pools. Other adjuncts that improved both training and performance included wave-killing gutters for pools, racing lane markers that also reduce turbulence, cameras for underwater study of strokes, large clocks visible to swimmers, and electrically operated touch and timing devices. Since 1972 all world records have been expressed in hundredths of a second. Advances in swimsuit technology reached a head at the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing, where swimmers—wearing high-tech bodysuits that increased buoyancy and decreased water resistance—broke 25 world records. After another round of record-shattering times at the 2009 world championships, FINA banned such bodysuits, for fear that they augmented a competitor’s true ability.

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