Mike
Contributor
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People who can't swim and want to get be a diver? Seriously?

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Handicapped or disabled divers would be a class of their own. I do not know any nor have I been exposed to any but would assume they have taken steps to have the proper support available if needed.
I am not trying to be confrontational at all, just expressing my personal opinion.
Handicapped or disabled divers would be a class of their own. I do not know any nor have I been exposed to any but would assume they have taken steps to have the proper support available if needthanksed.
yes they can do 300yd mfs option, but still must do 10 min tread water with no swim aids..
At our shop it the type of swim is an option-- for the instructor. Some require the swim, others the m/f/s/. I interpret it as a choice for the student, but could be wrong.
When I took OW we were required to tread water for 10 mins.
No floating, must stay vertical and move limbs. Obviously our instructor was not following the standards,..
Too bad there can't be one way for all. Seems too easy.
Handicapped and disabled divers have to pass the same watermanship assessments as able-bodied divers. No exceptions, as per agency standards.
That would be an incorrect interpretation. Student's don't get to dictate the conduct of training - that's the responsibility of the instructor.
The 'survival float' is universal - regardless of whether swim or mfs option is chosen.
Correct, he wasn't. He was conducting that exercise incorrectly - something that could not be justified should the matter be raised in a QA process by his agency.
I personally think that is how it should be done, if you cannot do those minor things you have no business scuba diving (disabled and handicapped excepted).