Our Mission Statement: “To prevent drowning and enrich the lives of children by teaching them to swim.”

Infant Swimming Resource (ISR) is a national program dedicated to preventing childhood drowning tragedies.  The program is the product of over 45 years of research and development in the areas of aquatic survival instruction and drowning prevention.  ISR lessons are not your typical swim lessons.  Our goal is to teach each child to be an aquatic problem solver.  Our philosophy is to teach competence before confidence.  Each ISR lesson is one-on-one with a highly trained certified instructor and lessons are individualized for each child’s needs.  The safety of our students is never compromised.

Here's What Your Child Can Learn:

Rollback-to-Float: Infants ages 6 months to 1 year learn this technique.

Swim-Float-Swim: Children ages 12 months and older learn this sequence.

Refresher Lessons: For returning ISR students.


ISR Kids is by far the best investment I could have made for my children. They have fun in the water and are confident swimmers without being risk takers. They know their limitations and what they can and cannot do in the water. It just brings me great joy to watch them enjoy the water so much and these were two children afraid of getting water in their eyes! Thank You Patty!!–Michelle

THANK YOU for teaching our child these invaluable skills! She was afraid of the water before taking your lessons and wouldn't go past the steps of the pool. Now we can't get her out of the water! She has gained so much confidence and truly enjoys swimming. People are amazed when they see how well she can swim at her age! I absolutely recommend this program to anyone with small children. Patty did an amazing job with our daughter and she still talks about "Ms. Patty" and how she wants to go back to swim lessons. –Sarah

Neither of my children (ages 2 and 4) would even put their heads under water at the time we started lessons. Now, not only are they able to do the swim/float/swim sequence to get to the side of the pool, they are also jumping into the pool, swimming the length of the pool, and diving for items on the bottom of the pool. These lessons made my children safer in the pool and have added immensly to the enjoyment they get out of swimming! Thank you, Patty!–Christy Carson