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
I firmly believe that for many, trying to learn tables can side track a class. It's like teaching a sliderule because someday, on a reef far, far away you just might need it if the sand people nab R2D2 and step on your calculator. If you're planning a dive, then the rule of 120/140 works just fine.What about, in the immortal words of Winnie-the-Pooh, "both, please"?
I firmly believe that for many, trying to learn tables can side track a class.
IMO it's more like teaching basic math and how to round and estimate because one day your precious iPhone with the calculator app may run out of juice. What's really interesting is that if you know that, you don't need to whip it out just to calculate that if you've had three beers at 2.88$ each, the sum on your bill should be just on the south side of 9$.It's like teaching a sliderule because someday, on a reef far, far away you just might need it if the sand people nab R2D2 and step on your calculator.
Well, if you're an instructor, I can understand the urge to cater to the lowest denominator. That doesn't mean that those of us who are able to learn how to add two two-digit numbers without the aid of a calculator - or Google - don't benefit from reading and getting acquainted with the tables.
IMO it's more like teaching basic math and how to round and estimate because one day your precious iPhone with the calculator app may run out of juice. What's really interesting is that if you know that, you don't need to whip it out just to calculate that if you've had three beers at 2.88$ each, the sum on your bill should be just on the south side of 9$.
--
Sent from my Android phone
Typos are a feature, not a bug
And the true gem of the evening was when I complemented him on the insane welds. Things of beauty. He he smiled and said "Ooooh Boaht, low pressure inside, high pressure outside, no difference."
I firmly believe that for many, trying to learn tables can side track a class. It's like teaching a sliderule because someday, on a reef far, far away you just might need it if the sand people nab R2D2 and step on your calculator. If you're planning a dive, then the rule of 120/140 works just fine.
Moreover, there's nothing intuitive about converting nitrogen loading to a letter group and then back again. That simply confuses the crap out of the average person. LED bar graphs are far easier for a new diver to comprehend the relationship between time, depth, surface intervals and how they relate to nitrogen loading. Dive simulators are great for that. You get the wrong person in a class and suddenly you're spending more time on tables than dive skills. Student time for me is precious... I want to spend what little I have on buoyancy, situational awareness and buddy skills. Tables are way, way down on my list of important skills to impart especially when they can turn into a distraction.
FWIW, we're finishing up a week with the ScubaBoard Surge here in Curacao. Not a single blip on the "PDC is broken" screen. That's about 55 of us, many of whom had multiple PDCs with absolutely no problems. There were even a few dives to 170+ at that. FWIW #2, I didn't see a single table all week... except for the breakfast, lunch and dinner tables.
That's about the worst misrepresentation of how and why I teach as I've ever read. You have.a pretty useless skill in search of a problem for the average diver: tables! Focusing on skills that the divers actually need and will use makes a bit more sense to me. You call that catering down to the lowest deominator and I call it using my time wisely to create the very best diver in terms of trim, buoyancy, situational awareness and buddy skills. My students won't need a PPB or a hundred dives to figure it all out. They leave the gate able to maintain a five foot window easily and know how to extrapolate their buddy's gas usage at the same time.Well, if you're an instructor, I can understand the urge to cater to the lowest denominator. That doesn't mean that those of us who are able to learn how to add two two-digit numbers without the aid of a calculator - or Google - don't benefit from reading and getting acquainted with the tables.
That's about the worst misrepresentation of how and why I teach as I've ever read.