@Michael Guerrero
what you are missing with what
@NetDoc ,
@oya , and I were trying to point out is that no matter how good your knowledge of diving is, how good your skills are, etc. those skills have nothing to do with you being prepared to teach. The story would be very different if you had years of experience volunteering with recreational level classes and were already acting as an AI and you started the thread with something like:
"for the last 3 years I've been volunteering with a local instructor for almost all of his classes. He's been letting me do a lot of the teaching aspects of it and I've found that this is something I really want to do. Unfortunately he is not a CD and the local CD wants me to spend $3k over 2 weeks to take an IDC. I feel like I'm ready to do this based off of my real world teaching experience, and I'm looking for a faster/less expensive way to finish this since I've done the mentor route for the last few years. What is your opinion on that, and do you have any suggestions on how to move forward"
That goes a lot farther with us than someone who thinks they are a good diver, but has no teaching experience, asking how to find the bare minimum way through to get what they want. No different than cave divers asking who the cheapest instructor is, or who only teaches to the course minimums. Do you want to be a good instructor, or do you just want the card? If you don't learn how to teach students, it doesn't matter how good your knowledge of the subject is, they won't learn from you. Not sure if you went to college, but anyone who went to college in some sort of STEM field can relate. How terrible were the full professors that you had to take courses from for low level courses vs. your high school teachers? You took Chem101 from a big name professor that is one of the leaders in their field but they can't teach for sh!t. Conversely your high school teacher was teaching the same material, but because they had a degree in TEACHING you actually learned more from them because they knew how to get through to you. Their knowledge of the subject was nothing like what you had from the professor in college, but the professor didn't have any formal background in teaching. Change chemistry to calculus, physics, whatever, I can basically guarantee that everyone who has a college degree can relate to this.
I am an instructor, I have diving knowledge and skills far superior to that of most course directors around the globe, certainly most instructors, but that does NOT mean that I am a better instructor than they are. I do not teach basic recreational courses because I understand my limitations as an instructor and know that there are those in the world that do it much better than I can. I much prefer to teach the advanced/technical courses where I can pass on the subtle hints and tricks once the student is comfortable in the water, but I still went through a very long mentorship program learning how to teach open water students. What they need from you as an instructor is someone who can teach them the basics, they don't give a damn how good your knowledge of physiology is because they don't care, they don't care what certifications you have or how good your line skills are, that's not what you are there to teach them. They need someone that knows how to relate to them to help them get through what they are struggling with and someone to teach them the very basics of scuba. How you go about doing that is what you should be learning from preferably a long mentorship with a good instructor, or at least a well run and thorough ITC/IDC whatever acronym your agency uses for it. That may not be cheap, but if you want to be an effective instructor, you have to do it.