Sponsored Content SportsEngine, an NBC Sports Next brand is always looking for fresh perspectives and new youth sports related content to share with our audiences of parents, coaches, and club admins. If you are interested in writing a guest post to be included on SportsEngine.com, check out our submission guidelines here. Kids Swimming and Diving by Catherine Holecko VeryWellFamily March 1, 2019 | 0 minutes, 43 seconds read Kids can swim on their own anytime; as members of a team, they race in individual events and/or as part of a relay team, accruing points for their club team. Swimming is an essential lifesaving skill, plus an excellent form of exercise. Are lessons or competition in swimming or diving right for your child? The basics: In competitive kids' swimming, athletes compete using one of four strokes: freestyle (sometimes called the crawl), breaststroke, backstroke, and butterfly. A race using all four strokes consecutively is called the individual medley (IM). Swimmers may also compete as part of relay teams. They may swim distances of 25 yards, 25 meters, or 50 meters; the Olympic standard is 50 meters. Divers compete in two kinds of events: springboard and platform diving. In each, the height of the diving board varies—either 1 or 3 meters for springboard, and 5, 7.5, or 10 meters for platform. Read the rest at VeryWellFamily sports in this article Diving Swimming tags in this article Beginner Guest Writer New to Sports Parent