Cross-cultural perspectives on aquatic competence in school-based swimming education

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.47197/retos.v78.118975

Keywords:

Water culture, water identity, cultural barriers, school physical education, cross-cultural analysis, habits, drowning prevention, equity, cultural studies, cultural policy

Abstract

Background: Swimming has traditionally been framed as a technical component of physical education, yet emerging scholarship positions aquatic competence as a culturally embedded practice shaped by identity, community narratives, and historical relationships with water. Objective: This systematic review adopts a Cultural Studies lens to examine how sociocultural determinants, such as water identity, gendered aquatic norms, culturally transmitted fear of water, and colonial water histories, shape school-based swimming education across divergent cultural contexts.

Methods: Following PRISMA guidelines, 47 studies published between 2000 and 2024 were synthesized. Cultural context was coded along a three‑point continuum from water‑rich (Cx1) to water‑distanced (Cx3) cultures.

Results: Four cross-cutting themes emerged: (1) water culture as a driver of aquatic competence; (2) cultural barriers limiting participation; (3) community cultural structures as key enablers; and (4) curriculum-culture mismatches that undermine program effectiveness. Conclusions: Aquatic competence is a culturally situated capability rather than purely physical skill. Findings highlight the need for culturally responsive curricula, community-based cultural intermediaries, and policy frameworks that address sociocultural inequities in aquatic safety and participation.

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Published

01-05-2026

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Section

Theoretical systematic reviews and/or meta-analysis

How to Cite

Irianty, R., Sailuddin, S. P., Ranti, G., Jowei, Y. I., Senlau, S., Monica, A. D., Yunita, E., Dasor, Y. W., Edu, A. L., Niuflapu, R. N., Wibowo, A., Mahira, R., & Eri, E. (2026). Cross-cultural perspectives on aquatic competence in school-based swimming education. Retos, 78, 1095-1110. https://doi.org/10.47197/retos.v78.118975