Hmm cant let that go.. Teaching is a business? What is charged barely covers the cost of insurance, gear etc? If I dont charge you for what I know you wont respect me (okay unfair, you wont respect what I teach)?
Teaching is a profession to be sure and if what you teach has value you are entitled to payment for the service of teaching right? I dont argue that point, I argue that you divide what you teach up into segments solely for the purpose of chargeing more for information (with the possibility of this division placing your students at risk). I also argue that some appear to be attempting to make a living teaching diving at a LDS and are trying to justify this crazy structure to further those goals not to better improve how they teach. I have no problem paying for OW or even AOW (although I must say the division of these two seems well Dangerous, regardless of your "athletic" ability or raw nerve). A note on this "danger" I have skydived, rockclimbed to 5.11 trad and spent 4 years in 82nd Airborne, I dont doubt my confidence to overcome an obstacle and yet I still believe training in OW is poor at best.
Am I the only person posting who sees that by the costs, divisions, requirements, certifications etc. the sole purpose of some Agencies/LDS/Instructors appears to be to reduce the number of instructors, increase the cost to students, limit knowledge available (well at least until you take that "specialty")? What possible purpose could it serve the student to only teach OW and not include the requirements of AOW? What purpose does it serve to give "tastes" of courses like underwater nav, deep diving, and night diving (limited visiblity diving). Every single one of those courses WILL affect a novice diver. Oh and dont even get me started on the bouyancy "specialty" *** are you thinking placing something so important seperate from basic instruction (can you say cork from 60+ feet after a 40 min dive?), accidents happen true, but you sure as hell are increasing the likely hood of those accidents.
If your a private instructor and have your own insurance (highly unlikely) and YOU buy specialty gear strictly for the benefit of your students, you have a right to cover your costs by all means. How much you charge me really isn't going to impress me with you as an instructor (sorry). I would guess by my own experience and all the group classes from Lds everywhere in Monterey that you dont pay insurance and the LDS covers most of the gear (for a fee of course).