If you're feet-up and are ascending, the direction you wish to go to solve the immediate problem (an unwanted ascent) is the direction you're pointing! KICK!
Once you get the ascent arrested (and you CAN unless it gets REALLY out of hand!) flipping over is easy. If you flip first then you're still ascending and that situation has gotten worse - maybe much worse!
I decided against a "formal" drysuit class for several reasons, in no particular order:
1. All the places around here wanted to teach me to use the drysuit as a BC. I have a lot of problems with that, the most important of which is that it forces you to dive with the dump cranked down and I believe that the enormous potential volume of the suit makes that decision amazingly unsafe. Plus, I already have a BC and know how to use it.
2. They all also maintained that the proper means of recovering from a "feet up ascent" is to do the "tuck and roll". Uh, if you are going up, and catch it relatively early, the correct path TO ME seems to be to FIRST fix the ascent problem (which you easily CAN since you are pointed in the right direction!) and SECOND to fix the feet-up problem. Second, you don't run into that problem to any significant degree if you don't have a huge amount of air in the thing to begin with (see (1) above!)
3. None of the local places, save one, thought that they should offer this class with their own gear; rather, they thought you should either rent gear from them or buy it first then take the class from them.
4. Finally, I tried it out in my pool and came to the conclusion that I could handle it.
Turns out I'm right
