Cthippo
Contributor
I'm not entirely sure where this should go, so if a mod feels it would be better somewhere else, please feel free to move
One of the biggest challenges I have noticed in the SCUBA community, or at least this board, which is not the same thing, is widespread distrust of certification qualifications.
Simply stated, many people feel that just because someone is certified does not mean that they are competent. There are of course many reasons this might be the case, someone who hasn't dove in a couple of years, someone who only dives twice a year etc. Putting those aside, everyone seems to have a tale of bad instructors turning out unprepared students. I got to thinking about it last night and what is the difference between a SCUBA cert and a drivers license (in some states) or a pilot's license or a professional license?
Third party certification.
When it matters, instructors are not allowed to certify their own students. In activities where the public is at risk from a poorly trained practitioner, you get trained by one person or agency, but tested and certified by another, independent, evaluator who was not involved in your training. This adds a level of fairness and accountability for both students and instructors, and a level of reassurance to the public that the person is minimally qualified to perform the task safely.
Now, one could make the argument that SCUBA divers do so at their own risk and if we kill ourselves it mostly doesn't affect anyone else, and honestly I think this is a valid point. It's hard to mow down 20 people with a SCUBA tank the way you can with a car.
So what would this look like? I think it could be as simple as a single pool session with a third part evaluator at the end of your class. You would still do OW dives with your instructor, but the certification could take place in a pool. Evaluator would have a checklist of skills, set up your rig, safely enter the water, establish neutral buoyancy, swim the length of the pool and back using any kick without surfacing or touching bottom, demonstrate common hand signals, demonstrate donating a reg to an OOA diver and assisting them to the surface. Tow a tired or injured diver. The whole process should take less than 30 minutes and use less than a tank of air. If the student passes all the skills they get certified. If not, they get one chance per skill to re-test the same session, or they have to come back another day. The standards for these skills already exist and are pretty generic across the common US training agencies. The evaluators need only be certified at the level they are evaluating and should be independent of the dive shop or instructor, but need not be actual training agency employees.
Ideally this should be part of initial OW training, but could also be offered as an ex post facto verification of skills .
One of the biggest challenges I have noticed in the SCUBA community, or at least this board, which is not the same thing, is widespread distrust of certification qualifications.
Simply stated, many people feel that just because someone is certified does not mean that they are competent. There are of course many reasons this might be the case, someone who hasn't dove in a couple of years, someone who only dives twice a year etc. Putting those aside, everyone seems to have a tale of bad instructors turning out unprepared students. I got to thinking about it last night and what is the difference between a SCUBA cert and a drivers license (in some states) or a pilot's license or a professional license?
Third party certification.
When it matters, instructors are not allowed to certify their own students. In activities where the public is at risk from a poorly trained practitioner, you get trained by one person or agency, but tested and certified by another, independent, evaluator who was not involved in your training. This adds a level of fairness and accountability for both students and instructors, and a level of reassurance to the public that the person is minimally qualified to perform the task safely.
Now, one could make the argument that SCUBA divers do so at their own risk and if we kill ourselves it mostly doesn't affect anyone else, and honestly I think this is a valid point. It's hard to mow down 20 people with a SCUBA tank the way you can with a car.
So what would this look like? I think it could be as simple as a single pool session with a third part evaluator at the end of your class. You would still do OW dives with your instructor, but the certification could take place in a pool. Evaluator would have a checklist of skills, set up your rig, safely enter the water, establish neutral buoyancy, swim the length of the pool and back using any kick without surfacing or touching bottom, demonstrate common hand signals, demonstrate donating a reg to an OOA diver and assisting them to the surface. Tow a tired or injured diver. The whole process should take less than 30 minutes and use less than a tank of air. If the student passes all the skills they get certified. If not, they get one chance per skill to re-test the same session, or they have to come back another day. The standards for these skills already exist and are pretty generic across the common US training agencies. The evaluators need only be certified at the level they are evaluating and should be independent of the dive shop or instructor, but need not be actual training agency employees.
Ideally this should be part of initial OW training, but could also be offered as an ex post facto verification of skills .