PfcAJ
Contributor
In fact, I've seen exactly zero GUE divers admit that anything associated with GUE is anything but perfect
I see you haven’t read my rants about Rec 3
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In fact, I've seen exactly zero GUE divers admit that anything associated with GUE is anything but perfect
Welcome to the world of tech diving- not every course taken results in a pass. Sometimes you need to go home and work on whatever it was you lacked and come back with a positive attitude and try again. I wouldn't label that a failure by any stretch of the imagination.
If you ask anyone designing any training worth a darn, the only goal of any course is to ensure that students will successfully complete the objectives of the course by the completion of the course. Due to various circumstances (unwillingness to work towards that goal by some students, illness, etc), few courses have a 100% success rate, but all well designed courses will complete the objectives for almost all students.
If you're asking how I'd rearrange GUE's fundamentals course, quite frankly I'd get rid of it completely. I'd replace it with a prerequisite for technical courses of "successfully complete an evaluation by a GUE instructor", where the relevant standards (currently objectives for fundies) could be judged (go/no-go styel), areas to be worked on identified, and follow on evaluation done prior to being able to continue (if "no-go" on the evaluation). To get to that point should involve 1-on-1 (or group) coaching with an instructor or other divers or even self-training if it's something that just needs more practice, for as long as is necessary, before getting evaluated again. It's quite clear to me that making their "standards for going into tech diving" a course, instead of coaching/mentoring potential students, is at the root of the problem. They simply don't have a method of teaching the skills to the people they allow in the course, in the allotted time, so the course is a failure. Without a way to make a course that can accomplish the objectives reliably, it shouldn't have been made a course in the first place.
This has been addressed several times in the thread. Did you not read it, or did you not understand it?
When you design a course, the course's difficulty is taken into account and is an integral part of the design. That starts with prerequisite skills--you identify what skills and knowledge a diver needs to have to be eligible for the course. (You don't allow students into an algebra course after Algebra I.) It also includes how long it will take a qualified student to complete those high standards. (You don't expect calculus I students to finish the class in a month.) Saying that qualified students are not completing the class successfully because the standards are too high is another way of saying that the course design does not facilitate qualified students meeting the standards within the limits of the course.
I see you haven’t read my rants about Rec 3
Fundies skills are OOA air share, 5 kicks, shoot dsmb. These are skills that get taught in OW and most certainly AOW; how can GUE have any lower prerequisites?
Balanced rig is not a philosophy embraced by every tech diver. It should be a personal choice.balanced rig.
Nothing. However you meet prerequisite skills works.John,
What is the problem of hiring an instructor to work on individual diving skills (like hiring a tutor) in order to be ready for fundies (calculus)?
So you are saying that al certified divers meet the prerequisites for the course. I will take your word for it.I like that you are putting a little more detail forward so thank you for that. Fundies skills are OOA air share, 5 kicks, shoot dsmb. These are skills that get taught in OW and most certainly AOW; how can GUE have any lower prerequisites?
A training course that has (self-published) results of almost a third of it's participants not meeting the objectives of the training at the end of the training is, by all objective standards, failing and almost certainly that's due to poor design.
John,
What is the problem of hiring an instructor to work on individual diving skills (like hiring a tutor) in order to be ready for fundies (calculus)?