The course, as I understand it, is a Basic Open Water. The students do need to show a level of swimming skill. How far that goes seems to be a sticky point. At a basic level - where do you want them to be? If the course is to be a foundation of diver ed - then they need to learn to dive, theory, and practice.
Perhaps a more viable alternative is to require the swim in full gear at depth? Properly weighted, proper buoyancy and trim, etc. That's probably a better way to assess if a diver could save my butt in an underwater diving emergency. Or would that be taking diver education/training in the wrong direction?
The options are here to explore. Perhaps change is good - now would be a great time to make changes.
My dive buddy can swim like a fish, but can he/she save my butt below where I probably am located. At the surface I would hope he/she followed me up and is in close proximity. Just a different perspective.
K
We each come to the table with our own experiences and baggage. The more you have of one, there's a high likelihood of having more of the other as well. All each of us can give is our opinion and try to establish our basis on which it was developed.
I have never been a swimming instructor. The basis for my comments are largely vested in my background as a Director and contributor to the SCUBA Bronze program for the Royal Life Saving Society of Canada and the originator of the Canadian Coast Guard Rescue Swimmer Program. In other words, I come at this from a diver rescue perspective. Added to this is my experience as a SCUBA Instructor, Naval Diving Officer and as a commercial diver throughout my career. I'm not saying my opinion is worth more than anyone elses, but it's important to know where people are coming from. Why they say the things they do.
A person who can swim efficiently is comfortable in the water and has a higher panic threshold than someone who doesn't swim as well. Swimming (both above and underwater) are an excellent preparation for teaching a diver. It gives him/her a basis to develop the skill-sets for diver rescue that a less effective swimmer doesn't have.
When I was small I crawled before I walked. I did the same thing with diving. Swim first, dive later.
The next thing is the use of fins, mask and snorkel. Years ago, this was a requirement that has been all but lost. Several weeks use to be spent perfecting these skills. The thought was that if you can do doff and don holding your breath, it would be easier with an hour's worth of air on your back. I found this to be a correct assumption.
By the time a person got to SCUBA, they were hyped, the wait was over. They glided through the skills. When it came time for them to transition to open-water, they were ready. Having passed a more difficult exam than a OW SCUBA Instructor (with particular attention to underwater physiology, physics, dive planning and decompression) they were good to go. When they completed the OW and were certified, they had a card they were proud of. They had accomplished something.
I would not hesitate for any of my family to dive unsupervised with any diver I certified immediately after certification. If I didn't feel that way, the person wouldn't get the card. For me, this is what I called minimum requirements.
So it comes down to philosophy. Do you want to create a diver to make money? For me the answer is no. I don't want to look in the eyes of the widow, if I know that it was my insufficient level of training that caused the accident. It's not going to happen. The question is if you are the Instructor, will you sign off on the course you develop here. Will you be able to look in the widow's eyes. For me that's what counts. Safety is first. Enough said, sorry this has become a dissertation.