If you work at a school with water-based co-curriculum activities - including swimming lessons - it is essential that you take all the appropriate precautions to ensure pupils, staff, and visitors remain safe whilst participating in activities and visiting your facilities. These measures include ensuring staff hold the relevant qualifications, and water safety plans and procedures are in place.

Qualifications – for staff and sixth-form pupils

National Rescue Award for Swimming Teachers and Coaches (NARSTC)  

Our National Rescue Award for Swimming Teachers and Coaches (NRASTC) is a supervision and rescue award for swimming teachers, coaches, or instructors working during programmed activities, such as swimming lessons. It is suitable for teachers working in a wide range of swimming pools where the water is deeper than the teachers’ standing depth and meets the individual site’s risk assessment.

Course content includes; the teacher, swimming pool and class management, intervention rescue and emergency action, CPR, and First Aid with approximately 14 hours of training plus external assessment. Training hours are extended if integrating Emergency First Aid at Work (EFAW) or AED training.

National Pool Lifeguard Qualification (NPLQ)

Our National Pool Lifeguard Qualification (NPLQ) is the most awarded pool lifeguard qualification in the UK and Ireland, with more than 90 per cent of all pool lifeguards qualified through RLSS UK.

The NPLQ is great for your older students to achieve and is a fantastic springboard for a range of careers - from the emergency services and the military to the leisure sector - and we know of many successful and even famous people who boast of being a lifeguard on their CV! Our #IStartedAsALifeguard gives a flavour of where being a lifeguard can lead. 

The NPLQ course requires a minimum of 36 hours of training, followed by a theory assessment and practical pool, First Aid, and CPR assessment. The qualification is open to anyone that is 16-years-of-age at the time of the assessment. 

After First Aid, CPR, and pool rescue tuition, your students will feel proud to know how to save a person’s life. They’ll also develop many critical and transferrable skills such as communication, leadership, responsibility, and working as part of a team.

Consultancy

Does your school have water on or around its grounds?

Whether the water takes the form of a: fountain, pond, stream, or lake directly on your grounds, or a river running alongside or a nearby body of water - if the water is accessible to your students, visitors, staff, or the public, as a privately or charitably funded school (not administered by local government) you have responsibilities for water-related safety and may be liable. Recognising your accountabilities for managing water-related-safety is the first step, and the RLSS UK Consultancy Service team can help you with the rest:

  • Risk Assessment
  • Training, Capability, and Qualifications
  • Operational Planning 
  • Public Rescue Equipment
  • Personal Protective Equipment
  • Integrated Water-Safety Plan
  • Advice
  • Event Safety

Our team is here to help you create a safer environment for your community, provide peace of mind for parents and ensure the safest provision for your students.

To discuss your water safety consultancy needs, request a call



Frequently Asked Questions

What are our legal responsibilities regarding ponds, lakes, or rivers on school/university grounds?

Educational facilities have a duty of care to ensure the safety of students, staff, and visitors. This includes conducting appropriate risk assessments, implementing reasonable safety measures, providing adequate supervision, and establishing emergency procedures for water bodies on your property. Our RLSS UK consultants can help you understand and fulfil these responsibilities. 

What considerations should we take when organizing trips to sites with open water? 

When planning trips to sites with open water, consider factors such as conducting a thorough risk assessment of the location, ensuring adequate safety measures are in place, providing clear guidelines to students and staff about water safety rules, and ensuring appropriate supervision ratios. The RLSS UK Consultancy Services team can assist in developing a comprehensive safety plan for such trips.  

What factors should we consider when providing students with open water activities? 

When providing open water activities to students, consider conducting a detailed risk assessment of the activity and location (Remember those conducting risk assessments should be deemed competent,  with the necessary skills, knowledge, attitude, technical proficiency, and experience), ensuring participants are aware of safety rules, and having the required equipment and trained staff. Establishing clear emergency procedures and providing adequate supervision are also important. RLSS UK consultants can help you design and implement safe open water activities. For more information, contact us at [email protected] or call 0300 323 0096. 

More FAQs for RLSS UK Consultancy Services

To discuss water safety consultancy for your school, request a call