T.C.
Contributor
First, get experience. Experience diving, Experience teaching, and experience working with people from all sorts of backgrounds and cultures, especially if you intend to work overseas. Figure out where you want to be, and get experience with the local language.
But first, you need to learn to dive. 10 dives means you know how to survive underwater, and somehow return to the surface without dying. It does not mean you know how to dive. Learn to control your bouyancy, until it's perfect. Learn the basic skills, until you can do them without thinking. You MUST master the basics. And finally, learn all the specialties you can. That's going to be expensive, but it'll set you up as a better qualified instructor.
Then, learn to teach. Teaching is not just repeating what's in the book. I can make a parrot do that. LEARN the material, learn the basis behind it. Learn to present it in interesting, imaginative formats, and learn to let the students teach themselves. You'll be mainly teaching adults, and no one likes to sit in class and learn how to use a compass from Powerpoint. They'll be texting on their cellphones inside 5 minutes. Go outside and make them navigate around the building and tell you the compass bearings. Diving is a hands-on skill. Learn to teach it that way. Learn to teach to a very diverse audience; you can't use the same approach to a 40-year old brain surgeon as you would a 18 year old kid who barely graduated the worst high school in town.
A pizza can feed a family of four.
Like it our not, you need money. You do have to eat. If you're going to work at a popular diving area, you may also want to start working on your Captain's License. Driving a boat may not be *fun*, but it helps to get a job.
But first, you need to learn to dive. 10 dives means you know how to survive underwater, and somehow return to the surface without dying. It does not mean you know how to dive. Learn to control your bouyancy, until it's perfect. Learn the basic skills, until you can do them without thinking. You MUST master the basics. And finally, learn all the specialties you can. That's going to be expensive, but it'll set you up as a better qualified instructor.
Then, learn to teach. Teaching is not just repeating what's in the book. I can make a parrot do that. LEARN the material, learn the basis behind it. Learn to present it in interesting, imaginative formats, and learn to let the students teach themselves. You'll be mainly teaching adults, and no one likes to sit in class and learn how to use a compass from Powerpoint. They'll be texting on their cellphones inside 5 minutes. Go outside and make them navigate around the building and tell you the compass bearings. Diving is a hands-on skill. Learn to teach it that way. Learn to teach to a very diverse audience; you can't use the same approach to a 40-year old brain surgeon as you would a 18 year old kid who barely graduated the worst high school in town.
You know the difference between a Dive Instructor and a Large pepperoni pizza?There are thousands of people who live and work as dive masters and instructors. Everything is not about money it's about being happy.There is no money in being a dive master or instructor, so get a good job and then spend your money travelling the world diving.
A pizza can feed a family of four.
Like it our not, you need money. You do have to eat. If you're going to work at a popular diving area, you may also want to start working on your Captain's License. Driving a boat may not be *fun*, but it helps to get a job.