1.Other than the book work, how many required confined and open water dives are there for the IDC and IE?
2. challenging portions of the IDC for you? What was involved in the IE?
3. Do you recommend taking the specialties instructor trainings immediately after? What specialties did you select?
Thanks
Hey Divetech99
You will find taking the leap to become a PADI Instructor can be incredibly exciting and offer a lot of career fulfilment
So to answer your first question:
When you say 'book work', do you mean dive theory?
Any dive theory that you learn during the
PADI Instructor Development Course, is all the knowledge development that encompasses the PADI system of diver education from the
Open Water course to the
Divemaster course. So you don't learn anything 'new', because you are developing your existing skills as a Divemaster to teach others effectively.
To begin the IDC, candidates require by PADI standards to have 60 logged dives and to enrol on the
PADI Instructor Examination, 100 logged dives.
The performance requirement of the IDC and IE is based on open water and confined water teaching presentations, and you need to score an average of 3.4 on two different confined water dive skills and 3.4 on two open water skills in one single teaching presentation.
I would suggest more time than the 8-day minimum for professional dive training so you are as fully prepared as possible for immediate instructional work in the dive industry.
You second question:
Most challenging for most candidates in my experience as an
IDC Staff Instructor with the
Downbelow Go PRO team of PADI Instructor Trainers, is the knowledge development presentations of which you need to achieve a score of 3.4 on two presentations.
It's challenging for anyone, even if they might have a lot of experience with public speaking, because you need time to practise following the outline of a lesson plan format to successfully achieve those points. Feedback from the Go PRO team is really valuable to improve scores on the knowledge development teaching presentations!
For your third question:
It is highly competitive in the dive industry, as far as instructional work, because there are many dive instructor in general. Many instructors may speak a variety of world languages and are able to cater to a wide variety of clients, and being qualified in popular dive disciplines, such as enriched air diving or underwater photography, will broaden your instructional skills and make you a much more attractive employee to a dive centre operation.
My own
PADI Specialty Instructor ratings were chosen based on what is popular in our own local area here in
Sabah, Borneo. That being said, we are not able to conduct certain specialised dive disciplines, such as ice diving - for obvious reasons, that we are based in the tropics!