Legal Lines (Standard of Care, Negligence, Liability)
Signals & Emergency Comms
Guarding & Rotation Judgment
Scanning and Pool Coverage
Public Education & Risk Prevention
100

When do you owe a standard of care?

As soon as you’re on duty and watching the pool.

100

What’s the meaning of a single short whistle blast?

Get a patron’s attention.

100

What’s the first thing you do during a rotation?

Make eye contact and confirm coverage with the next guard.

100

What is a Extensive Coverage?

Lifeguard(s) responsible for whole pool area

100

When should you step in to educate a patron?

Before a risk becomes a problem.

200

If you're scanning properly but miss a weak swimmer, are you negligent? Think of this swimmer as they don't need to be rescued they are just slowly making there way to the deep end

Not automatically. It depends on whether your scanning met NL standards.

200

What does two short whistle blasts tell other guards?

I need help or guard-to-guard alert.

200

From your position, you can’t see a key part of your zone. What now?

Move or ask for support. You need full visibility.

200

How long should it take you to scan your designated zone

10–30 second scanning window: is the time it should take for a lifeguard to complete a full and effective scan of their designated supervision zone

200

What’s the difference between a hazard and a risk?

A hazard is something that can cause harm (like water or equipment). A risk is the chance someone could actually get hurt by it — like drowning or injury.

300

A lifeguard intervenes with a high-risk dive but uses a skill they weren’t trained in and causes harm. What legal concept applies?

Negligence. They acted outside their scope of training — breaching standard of care.

300

When would you use a long whistle blast?

Major emergency — clear the pool now.

300

During a rotation, what must both guards do before switching spots to make sure supervision is never lost?

Maintain visual contact, signal with "guard alert," and confirm that the zone is still covered before moving

300

What scanning Pattern is this? a guard is watching from top left to bottom right corners. What pattern is this? 

Zig-Zag

300

What’s a respectful way to redirect a weak swimmer from deep water?

"Let’s stick to shallow — you’ll be safer and still have fun."

400

When can YOU be held personally liable for an incident?

If you act outside your training or completely fail your responsibilities.

400

What exactly do you tell EMS during a emergency

❑Speak slowly and be clear

❑Know the situation and victim(s) condition

❑Name and Age (e.g., baby, toddler, child, teen, adult, older adult)

❑Condition (e.g., ABCs, conscious/unconscious, medical emergency)

❑What happened (e.g., swimming laps and chest began to hurt)

❑Know where to direct EMS when they arrive (e.g., north doors)

400

What are the three standard lifeguard positions?

Chair, standing, and strolling.

400

Is a slide guard responsible for their own area and the whole pool?

No. They're responsible for their slide zone only.

400

How can lifeguards role-model professionalism?

Look alert, stand tall, wear uniform, scan constantly.

500

A parent ignores your warning, their child gets hurt. Are you still responsible?

Probably not. You did your part — they didn’t follow your direction.

500

What does the Missing Adult Hand Signal Look like. Show ME!!!

.

500

What are the main duties of the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd guards during an emergency?

  • 1st Guard: Signal, enter, assess ABCs

  • 2nd Guard: Assist with rescue and removal

  • 3rd Guard: Evacuate patrons, contact EMS, bring equipment

500

You’re scanning and spot a child clinging to the wall, low in the water, with no parent nearby. You compare what you see to known risk signs like fatigue, inexperience, or separation.

What scanning technique are you using?

Profiling — you’re matching behavior to known signs of potential distress.

500

How many Physicals do we want to do today!

All 4 again!