turns out those "semester long" courses are NOT all semester...
Anthony,
I currently work at the univ where I received my initial scuba training. Well, sort of: I work for the System Office, not actually for the campus where I was trained. At any rate, my office is located on that campus, and I remain in contact with that scuba course which is still being taught all these years later. The course continues to have a lecture session (which meets every Tuesday night for ~3 hours--throughout the 14-week semester) and a pool session (which meets Monday and Wednesday mornings for ~1 hour each meeting--throughout the 14-week semester). I assure you, this is a *real*, semester-long college course, with a curriculum vetted by a university curriculum committee. The students pay college tuition and fees for this course and receive college credit. During the lecture session, students take quizzes and a mid-term and a final exam. During the pool session, students are graded on physical fitness skills (running, swimming, push-ups, sitting-tucks, pull-ups, etc.), skin-diving skills, and scuba skills. Students receive a final grade for the course which appears on their college transcript. (I took my course pass-fail, as I was a graduate student at the time, older, and didn't want to risk too much...)
EDIT: My description above pertains to the scuba course as it is taught during the fall semester or spring semester. I should also add, at the time I was a student, the course also had a weekly "optional" two-hour Sunday pool session during which students could practice additionally and attempt and pass skills. The Sunday pool session is no longer a part of the course.
I took my course during the summer semester, though, and things were structured a bit differently: The class met ~3 hours each day, Monday through Thursday, for the eight-week summer semester. Each day the class began in the lecture room (~1-1.5 hours) in the campus natatorium, and then moved into the pool itself for the wet session. There was an "optional" two-hour Sunday pool session, as well. This was scuba instruction taught with "both barrels!" I TA-ed for the course for several semesters, and I always preferred to TA the summer version. The summer version is no longer taught.
Sounds like your course was structured a bit differently.
Safe Diving,
rx7diver
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