I have not yet dove Nitrox - the LDS course I took was a one-evening, two-hour session, all done in the local shop. I had picked up the SSI Nitrox booklet at Divetech a few weeks prior and was well prepped though. I'm the kind of guy who likes to know everything possible about what I'm learning and most certainly wouldn't have gotten that from the session alone (where the booklet wasn't offered).
I noted that the booklet made a reference along the lines of 'in your course you may dive Nitrox' but it didn't suggest that said dive was of particular importance. Not a sentiment I strongly disagree with since the differences between diving Nitrox and air come up in dive planning, not in the actual dive (MOD's notwithstanding).
m.
So my impression was correct, thanks for clarifying it. Aside from getting a dive out of your course i.e "bang for your buck" You also go thru the process of things like taking an O2 sample... Repetition is a good learning tool and practicing things like EAD while on the boat also quite beneficial between dives. You should always be able to fall back on something should your computer fail. Which does happen... Quite often within many brands, be it user error or just a crap computer lol. Know your tables, know how to calculate EAD, always wear a watch to back up your time and a depth gauge that records deepest depth that has to be manually reset and you will be a better diver for it.