Visual Supervision
The Basics
Learn how to recognize a swimmer in trouble.
Assign an adult Water Watcher whose only responsibility is to watch.
If the assigned adult Water Watcher needs a break, the responsibility of watching the children must be assumed by another adult Water Guardian.
The role of an adult Water Watcher differs from that of a lifeguard. The Water Watcher’s role is to watch and PREVENT emergencies. A lifeguard is trained to rescue in the event of an emergency.
Teach children who cannot swim to stay away from water unless accompanied by a qualified adult. A qualified adult knows how to swim, stays within arm’s reach of the child, and maintains eye to eye contact with the child.
Wear the Water Watcher badge as a physical reminder that you are on duty.
Have a phone available for emergencies. Do not talk, text or surf the internet while you are on Water Watcher duty.
VIDEO: What Drowning Looks Like (Oasis Pools)
VIDEO: INVESTIGATORS: Drowning is Silent (My Fox9)
VIDEO: Instinctive Drowning Response (Mario Vittone, CBSN)
VIDEO: Reach or Throw, Don’t Go (WIVB TV, YouTube)
ARTICLE: Drowning Doesn’t Look Like Drowning (Mario Vittone)
Action Items
Take a basic water rescue or home pool essentials class.
The American Red Cross offers these courses.Be a Water Guardian! Take the Naomi’s Grace Water Watcher Pledge and the Pool Safely Pledge in front of your children. Document with a photo or video.
Share your Pledge photos/videos on social media and challenge you friends and family to take the pledges too.
Read all the Layers of Protection.
Take and share the Naomi’s Grace Water Safety Quiz.
Dive Deeper
According to a study conducted by the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC), most children who drowned in home pools were out of sight fewer than five minutes. One or both parents were caring from them at the time.
Lifeguards undergo professional training to learn to rescue distressed swimmers. Their duties DO NOT include babysitting patrons of the pool or body of water. The Lifeguard’s role is to RESPOND to emergencies.
Infographic: Chain of Drowning Survival (American Red Cross)
Infographic: Circle of Drowning Prevention (American Red Cross)
Link: NDPA’s “No More Drown” YouTube Channel (National Drowning Prevention Alliance)
Link: Unintentional Drowning: Get the Facts (CDC)
Link: Water Safety Safety (American Red Cross)