packrat12
Contributor
..For about 10 years now I have regularly challenged people when they keep repeating the clichés about instruction being dumbed down in recent years, etc. etc. etc. I ask people to give specific examples, and they never can. ....
I have mentioned directly how the courses have been dumbed down over the years - you just choose to ignore those examples with simplistic answers such as we are more efficient now.
1. In the 1984, training took over 5 weeks, multiple meetings in person for OW training. I started mine (YMCA) in 5/19/84 and finished 7/2/84. We met at least on Tuesdays, Thursdays and 1 or 2 days during the weekend. The shorter courses were just starting in our area after about '85. The present course, no matter how efficient you think it is cannot be as thorough in training. Now, if you pass a skill 1 time (no matter how many tries) it can be called good.
2. In the YMCA course ('84), we learned about Archimedes' principle, Boyle's law, Henry's law, Charles' law, Dalton's law, Diffusion, most common medical conditions, O-tox, ppo2, mixed gasses, regulator design, valve design, tank markings etc. We spent a lot of time on tables and even practiced deco tables. We were regularly quizzed and tested on them. My instructor went out of his way and also got ALL of us CPR certified. We assembled gear up to several times a day for each of those training days, which were at least 4 hrs. Any one skill was done numerous times by everyone. If anyone had an issue, they would be able to practice it with the instructor until they could get it right regularly. In watching the changes from '84 until current with numerous friends and family members that have gone through the OW courses, these skills are not there. They can do them but often barely. I personally know that many of my skills learned in '84 are still with me today. They were 'burned' into me and have been called upon from time to time.
3. I was there for my wife's whopping 2 week course in 1992. By that point, if you could not do a skill, you would get no additional time as the instructor did not have it. I had to fill in the additional training at home with her. I would suggest that this often creates a 'nervous' diver as they are not sure of themselves. By my daughter's time, it is even less time then my wife's course although we got a private instructor who was more apt to tailor her course and was not doing it for the money. Again, no matter how efficient the training, you get less instructor time to hone basic skills that are needed.
Blended training theory is great but you need to develop skills and that takes regular repetition.As a CFI, I would not even remotely say a student could be a pilot without significant flight training! Many skills were practiced from the first day and every training day after. A diver cannot become a proficient diver without significant skill training in person, in water with an instructor. Every skill has an objective, element and result. Just because they are done once does not mean that they were learned.
The real problem is that if an instructor today was to bill what is truly necessary for in depth training, fewer students yet would become divers as it would be far too expensive. The old joke "difference between a ___ Instructor and a pizza - the pizza can feed a family of 4" is a real issue. Instructors that rely on the income cannot make much money even in the current model. My instructor was doing it for fun and sharing his skills. As a result, he was more dedicated to the person. His financial situation did not depend on students. This is not a ding against full time instructors but rather against the system. Flight instruction also has the exact same issues, but those pilots are typically trying to become airline pilots or the equivalent and can sacrifice for a while.
I also have read my original OW book twice. Absolutely no mention of depth. It even talked about common effects at 175' or deeper. We calculated deco from it. It regularly talked about 132'. The only limitation that was specifically addressed was a recommendation for No-Deco. All the tables in it went to 190' (US-Navy).
As for AOW, the primary thing I had not done was lift bag work. Everything else had been taught to me in the YMCA OW course much earlier. I had an instructor that I had known and dove with since I learned to dive and we often talked about the differences in training. He stated a very simple paraphrased statement: "The longer course was better but if I did not teach the shorter courses, no one would learn from me."Once one agency started teaching shorter courses, they all had to come in line for survival.