Shortly after 1995, buddy breathing with one regulator was made optional, and it was subsequently dropped entirely. All but a few agencies have done the same thing. That is because of a realization that 1) with modern scuba equipment, there should never be a time when it would be necessary, 2) research by Glen Egstrom (Berkeley professor and former NAUI president) indicated it takes many, many successful practice attempts and then continued practice for a buddy team to be able to perform it satisfactorily in a real situation, and 3) research indicated too many cases when one person being out of air led to a double fatality. An OOA doing a proper CESA was considered to be a safer alternative.
Skin diving is still part of the confined water class. In the open water, dive #1 was a skin dive. It became optional after that, so you probably did not do it. There were really only 4 scuba dives then as it is now.
All other skills are included today. Here is a PARTIAL list of skills that have been added to the course since then.
- Swim test--10 minute float
- Students must assemble and disassemble equipment at least 5 times in the confined water sessions.
- Full mask flood in addition to the partial mask flood
- OOA using alternative air source
- Disconnect low pressure inflator
- Reconnect a loose cylinder band under water
- Emergency weight drop on the surface
- Respond by signalling to a request to know current cylinder pressure with reasonable accuracy without looking (because you had looked on your own recently).
- Hover for 30 seconds using LP inflating mechanism one time and by oral inflation another time.
- In the confined water portion of the course, plan and conduct a mini-dive with a buddy.
- OOA swim using alternate air source, bot as the
- During the mini-dive, respond to surprise situations (OOA, loose cylinder band, etc.) that were created by the instructor.
- Oral inflation at the surface.
- In open water dives, hover using oral inflation.
- In OW, use alternate air source in OOA situation as both donor and receiver, with an ascent to the surface and oral inflation.
- OW dive #4 is to be planned and executed by buddy teams with no input or assistance from the instructor unless necessary.
Of course not. It couldn't be done in 3 days the, and it cannot be done in 3 days now. (Actually, in a private session it can--the confined water sessions go quickly with a private session.) As I said, my certification was done in 3 days back then by virtue of the fact that they skipped a healthy chunk of those standards.
My point was that at just about the time you were getting your thorough class, I was getting a shorter class than I have ever witnessed after that. It is a fallacy to assume your experience then was the same as everyone else's, just as it would be a fallacy to assume any class today represents all others. My niece is a NAUI certified diver. She accomplished that with one pool session that was 2 hours long and one OW dive to a maximum depth of 10 feet. that was about 12 years ago. Should I assume that all NAUI classes are of that ilk?