Actually some certifications requires that the diver is accompanied by a DM or Instructor and can only dive under his/her supervision. He is not certified to dive unsupervised. At other times the card indicates the diver is allowed to dive unsupervised, but is trained insufficiently to do so.
The closest I have seen to this certification is Junior Open Water (PADI) and it applies to youngsters under 15. The training is EXACTLY the same as OW (although normally one-on-one) but for liability reasons, the JOW is restricted to diving 40' or less and accompanied by a certified parent/guardian or dive professional (DM or Instructor). Works for me!
I suppose there could be resort certifications but I don't see them listed in the mainstream agency web sites (PADI, NAUI specifically) as certifying OW divers. There are some scuba intro programs but they don't purport to turn out Open Water divers and OW training is what we're talking about.
This is of course dependent upon opinion. Personally, I do not see the minimum requirements sufficient unless the diver was diving supervised in warm clear water.
Yup! And this is where the entire content of this thread lies: opinion. Not one PADI instructor has spelled out EXACTLY what the standards require. So, while folks stand around saying the standards are inadequate, they do so without disclosing the standards. Pretty easy to pass judgement when there are no facts!
One agency even requires the Instructor to certify the diver, as long as they pass the agencies requirements. In other words, if you went to an Instructor teaching through this agency and he added information to the program that he felt was required for your diving safety in the local area and you failed to absorb anything that he added to the program. You would walk away with your C-card (as long as you met the agencies requirements). Thank goodness, not all certification agencies do this.
And there is a problem with this, why? The instructor is free at any time to decide not to teach that agency's program. Instructors can teach any program they like!
Oh, you mean that they choose to teach PADI because it is the largest and most recognized program on the planet and this guarantees them a source of students? Well, there isn't much integrity in that, is there?
Perhaps pay isn't a good factor to determine value. Why is a Closed Bell Saturation Diver paid more than twice that of an engineer? Why are people looking after children in Day Care Facilities not making more than minimum wage? I suppose the only answer is that our values are screwed-up.
Perceived value. There are very few divers willing to take the risks of saturation diving hence scarcity. To overcome scarcity requires cash. Day care workers are a dime a dozen. It carries very little risk and requires very little training.
Our values are exactly correct! Now, if you want day care plus education, maybe you're willing to pay a little more. If you want a live-in nanny maybe you pay even more. If you want a full-time tutor in a variety of subjects, maybe you pay a lot.
Perceived value runs the world! Why does anybody pay the premium of SP regs over <pick a brand>? Perceived value! That's what is neat about 'perceived': it doesn't even have to be real!
As a past Navy and current Commercial Diver & Instructor, the only reason why the Instructors are more knowledgeable is that they teach to higher standards. This requires instructors to know about their subject matter. If you don't need to teach it, you don't have to know it. As diver standards are reduced, so is the caliber of instructor.
OK, but why does a recreational diver need to know all that 'higher standard' stuff? Just jump in, swim down, swim around and swim back up. No big deal. They're not training for confined spaces, they're not expected to understand deco diving or any of the rest of the complications of military or commercial diving. They don't need to have perfect trim and probably won't. Diving doesn't have to be pretty.
Richard, this could be a solution, but this would first presume that the organization certifying the instructors in-question felt that the level of instructors required to be higher. Again, it is in the hands of the certification agencies and not the instructors themselves.
No, all of the credible instructors could cancel their memberships with these lackadaisical agencies and start up with a new organization. Sure, they would starve to death before their new organization gained recognition but, hey, it's a matter of integrity!
Worse, their customers would still be looking for the fast program and where there is a demand, there WILL be a supply. So, even if a 'super' agency could be created, it might not be a commercial success.
The system is what it is. I doubt that anything will change and if it does, I doubt that it will improve.
Richard