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University of Chicago joins other schools in nixing swim requirements

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Murphy said he thinks learning to swim should be encouraged in the same way wearing a bike helmet is — but it shouldn’t be mandatory to graduate.

“It’s just sort of arbitrarily picking one requirement to focus on,” Murphy said. “It just seems really irrelevant.”

On Sept. 13 in a letter to students, Dean John Boyer and Vice President of Campus Life Karen Warren Coleman announced that they agree. In addition to no longer requiring the swim test, the university has removed its fitness test and a previously required three credits of physical education.

Warren Coleman said in an email that the “unusual” swimming and fitness requirements were implemented in the 1954-55 school year by the dean of students, rather than with a faculty process, which is normally how something like that would be done.

Jeremy Manier, a university spokesman, said the reason for the change was to give students options in how they choose to exercise. To facilitate that model, the Fit Chicago program — which used to cost students between $4 and $5 a class and includes Pilates, core training, yoga and Zumba — is now free.

Fred DeBruyn, aquatics director and assistant physical education director at Cornell, said the swim tests served a valuable purpose: preventing drowning.

“If we actually teach people how to swim and make it a life skill, that will in some ways break the cycle of having parents who have children who don’t know how to swim … and lessen the possibility of people drowning,” DeBruyn said.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that about 10 people die each day from unintentional drowning. It also says that drowning is the fifth leading cause of unintentional death in the United States. At the same time, unintentional drowning deaths decreased from about 5,700 in 1986 to an average of 3,880 from 2005-2009.

Many U. of C. students agree with the change, including Yusef Al-Jarani, who is the student government’s vice president for student affairs. Al-Jarani, a sophomore studying global and international studies, said the swim test — which he took with ease last year — was outdated.

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