packrat12
Contributor
I also keep forgetting to mention it, since my training most definitely would be called a blended training even today, the only real difference is many but not all instructors allow online training. Otherwise, my much later AOW teaching methods were very similar to my OW. I would not say more 'modern methods'. This also applies to my daughter's training, her boyfriends training, her boyfriends family's training in the last 2 years or so with a number of different instructors and shops! And for online training, I watched by daughter's boyfriend do his Nitrox. He really did not study or even comprehend the data. He skimmed the material, used the search functions for the questions and did the test. I would not call that learning. I made him go over it more in depth after he passed the written test! If that is current 'better teaching methods' I would really question the quality of the students coming out of OW....You keep referring to the era when instruction was delivered through lecture, the very worst method of information transfer, as the golden age of scuba instruction. Using better instructional methodologies that take less time is not dumbing things down...
..That is simply not true. Under the standards, your performance of a skill can only be passed if you can demonstrate to the satisfaction of the instructor that you have mastered it to the point that you can do it successfully from that point on. One successful attempt after many failures does not meet that definition. But, then, you knew that, didn't you?...
Actually it is quite common and I personally have seen it often enough. It might not meet your satisfaction but for a significant number of instructors it does meet theirs. For many, it is better to get them out then work on them further. Not enough time to practice skill is a big issue. Again, I see it regularly with a number of new divers I dive with. But then again, I have no vested interest in defending current teaching methods. <insert your report to standards statement here rather then fixing the fundamental flaw>
As for the AOW portion, where the problem comes in is that the basic skills were better rooted when the training was more thorough and comprehensive (read more time). I see numerous instances of very 'weak' divers today. They very much need the hand holding that AOW training provides. Even after AOW, I still see a lot of 'weak' divers. Unfortunately the agencies have become little more than a student mill. AOW existed (although it was not even mentioned in my course) when I learned to dive. It was not being used at that time as a mechanism to provide additional supervision as it is today. It was not until the 1990's that I had met a known AOW diver that was not a DM or instructor in my circles! It was bluntly never even talked about in the '80's on a boat. Skills were the key to the type of diving being done, not a piece of plastic.
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