Leatherboot69
Contributor
I think many casual divers who do OW only want to dive within Scuba Diver limits - ie supervised dives with a shallower depth limit. But the SD course isn’t that common and the OW course is only two more dives, so they do the OW course instead. So they are ending up with the level of training they need for the type of diving they want to do.
I’d also say that no course I’ve ever been on, diving or otherwise, has expected true mastery of a skill by the end of the course. By the end of my OW I had ‘mastered’ the 24 skills that my instructor taught me, but I hadn’t ‘mastered’ diving as a whole for another 40 dives or so, as I had to go off and practice on my own to build experience of applying those skills in real life diving. Same with driving-passing my driving test meant I had mastered the basics enough to go off and build real life experience outside of a training environment. Training courses are useful but it’s important to understand their role in the training process.
I’d also say that no course I’ve ever been on, diving or otherwise, has expected true mastery of a skill by the end of the course. By the end of my OW I had ‘mastered’ the 24 skills that my instructor taught me, but I hadn’t ‘mastered’ diving as a whole for another 40 dives or so, as I had to go off and practice on my own to build experience of applying those skills in real life diving. Same with driving-passing my driving test meant I had mastered the basics enough to go off and build real life experience outside of a training environment. Training courses are useful but it’s important to understand their role in the training process.