runsongas
Contributor
A higher level of training isn't going to help the LDS if the newly minted OW diver still ends up buying their first set of gear online.
Welcome to ScubaBoard, the world's largest scuba diving community. Registration is not required to read the forums, but we encourage you to join. Joining has its benefits and enables you to participate in the discussions.
Benefits of registering include
That’s true, but the LDS has the option of charging more for classes if they are good classes and are worth it. Interestingly though, my LDS decided to dump all in house instruction and refer people to a network of independents that have no affiliation with the shop. They decided that there was no money in instruction and it was a loser. So instead they are trying to concentrate on making money by selling overpriced dive gear. I guess competing with the internet and getting undercut when you are held in retail contracts by certain manufacturers is a healthy business plan? Wow, who knew?A higher level of training isn't going to help the LDS if the newly minted OW diver still ends up buying their first set of gear online.
it is the same with everything in every area. the standards are universal. What is accomplished in the individual environment is hard to police, because it is too easy for individuals to do their own thing. For example...Another question, how can an agency make a claim that all their OW training is universal around the world when It is not.
There is very little you can do to customize a standard jacket BCD. BP/W's and the system that Edd Sorenson designed and modified (and which I own, with his modifications) are far simpler in their basic design and are easily modified. that is, in fact, one of the selling points of a BP/W--its simplicity allows for a host of modifications.I recall reading of Edd Sorenson doing modifications of a side-mount rig.
A few years ago, in one of the endless string of threads on this topic, someone cited a dive shop in Florida that charged a whole lot more than standard for an OW course that offered over-the-top training. It was apparently working. Enough people w4ere interested to make it work. Of course, you do realize, that if the courses take much longer than standard, you have to pay the instructors more than standard, so it does not bring in any real additional income.That’s true, but the LDS has the option of charging more for classes if they are good classes and are worth it.
I know it would never happen, but I once said that dive instruction should be just like getting a drivers license, you can go to any independent school you like but the final test (written and water for fiving) is done by a state or government agency and your card is issued by the state. If drivers licenses were given out by the independent schools as they saw fit like C-cards it would be a colossal disaster.it is the same with everything in every area. the standards are universal. What is accomplished in the individual environment is hard to police, because it is too easy for individuals to do their own thing. For example...
Dive agencies have quality management systems that TRY to control this, but it is very hard to do unless the individual instructor who is screwing up is not reported. Why did I not report the violations of standards in my class? Because I was so happy to get certified that I did not pay attention to it. My log book had all the requirements spelled out, and when I go back and look at it today, I can see that the instructor signed off on all the skills I did not do. It was not until I became a professional myself that I dug out that old log book and realized what had happened.
- In one high school in which I taught, one of the English teachers said she loved to teach the novel Candide by the French author Voltaire. It was a standard part of the district course Major World Writers. She liked it so much she taught it in Major American Writers, Major British Writers, and pretty much any other course she taught.
- When i was in English graduate school, one of the professors taught the exact same curriculum in two different courses in consecutive semesters, even though the titles of the courses had almost exactly nothing to do with the content he taught.
- When I owned a Toyota a number of years ago, the local dealer was supposed to meet Toyota's exacting standards for quality maintenance, but we soon realized he was cheating at every turn.
- When I owned a Dodge a number of years ago, the local dealer was supposed to meet Dodge's exacting standards for quality maintenance, but we soon realized he was cheating at every turn.
- I own a FlexSteel sofa with a lifetime warranty on parts. You have to go to a certified FlexSteel repairman if there is a problem, and we did when it broke down. He told us that for FlexSteel, "lifetime" meant only 8 years, so we would have to pay for the parts. He gave us a bill. We called FlexSteel, and they informed us that for them "lifetime" did indeed mean "lifetime," and it absolutely did not mean "8 years." We did not owe anything for the parts. If we had not called FlexSteel, we would not have known, and their authorized repairman would have made a nice profit on the free parts. (No, I don't know what happened to him after the repairs.)
It's also possible they were afraid of running afoul of the rules on employees vs contractors.my LDS decided to dump all in house instruction and refer people to a network of independents that have no affiliation with the shop. They decided that there was no money in instruction and it was a loser. So instead they are trying to concentrate on making money by selling overpriced dive gear.
Ah--so you want to have government control of scuba certifications, do you? Many people would disagree.I know it would never happen, but I once said that dive instruction should be just like getting a drivers license, you can go to any independent school you like but the final test (written and water for fiving) is done by a state or government agency and your card is issued by the state. If drivers licenses were given out by the independent schools as they saw fit like C-cards it would be a colossal disaster.
You also have to be licensed in many other things too like cutting hair and contracting. The state issues the licenses not the teachers.
Diving is a pretty critical activity as I see it, a lot can happen, people can die or get seriously hurt. I think the way it is now is a perfect example of the honor system gone terribly wrong.