EireDiver606
Contributor
GUE Rec 1?1?I’d probably call it Rec1.
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GUE Rec 1?1?I’d probably call it Rec1.
Your post implies that there are only two levels of buoyancy: terrible and perfect. You suggest that at some point after OW certification, people with terrible initial buoyancy suddenly become perfect. I am not sure when that happens--I am far from that myself, and I have been diving for a while.IMHO Divers don’t have bad OW training, after all we all start somewhere.
No one develops perfect buoyancy and masters every skill straight from OW. It is simply not possible. People say OW is watered down or it’s not a high standard, but it is decent, especially when you have a good instructor like I did.
Where new divers make up skill level and expertise is not from the OW certification, but from independent dives with a buddy after that.
Stop expecting go divers to be amazing after their intital course, it doesn’t work like that.
There are tons of training options available from just about every agency. That is one of the criticisms you see the most often on ScubaBoard. People complain that there is a class for everything imaginable.What I don’t like is the standard of training after the OW course in most agencies. So when you finally get 50 or 100 dives under your belt, you say “what next?” And the answer to that is “not much”.
They’re meant to educate you, make you a better diver etc but all most of them are is another useless c card like Adventure Diver. What does it teach? Seriously. (And btw I’m not agency bashing I’m just bashing the course itself) It doesn’t teach you anything is the answer it just exchanges credit card details for a c card.
Sure, it’s definitely fun, but it’s not real education or skill improvement by any means.
What I meant is not only recording your class, but showing your students videos on Youtube etc. about trim, propulsion, skills.
I think a lot of the irritation with how dive instruction is structured is how it’s seemingly become a cash cow for agencies, and the source of contempt for people here on SB.There are many levels of buoyancy control, and what many of us would like to see is students leaving class with far better buoyancy control than used to be the norm. They will continue to improve as they dive, but they should start out with pretty decent skills if properly instructed in it from the start. What we should not do is say, "Well, they are not going to be any good at this until they go out and dive any more, so there is not point in working on it now."
There are tons of training options available from just about every agency. That is one of the criticisms you see the most often on ScubaBoard. People complain that there is a class for everything imaginable.
If they were smart they would have an optional alternative course to the piecemeal option.
First of all, you do understand that all agencies have multiple courses and multiple levels of certification, don't you? It isn't just one?So, Put Another Dollar In is a valid acronym in the minds of many. A lot of people are reading between the lines and seeing through the guise that it’s structured this way to feed students slowly with info for better absorption. However it also hard to ignore that it smacks of greed and a money shake down.
Yes I understand all of the above, and no instructors should not work for free or at a discount. But packaging several courses together at somewhat of an overall discount IMO is a win win. The students are already there, the instructor is already there. Doing all these classes separately means a lot more logistics, possible overnight stays, more gas, more pool fees, etc.First of all, you do understand that all agencies have multiple courses and multiple levels of certification, don't you? It isn't just one?
Next, do you believe instructors should be paid for the work they do, or do you believe they should work for free in order to make it cheaper for students? Along those lines, do you believe a course that lasts longer and requires more work for the instructor should cost more, or do you think the instructor should be willing to add more work for free?
Next, are you saying that courses should be longer and contain more information and training than a student needs at that level, thus costing more for the student, rather than containing the amount of training necessary for that level, leaving it up to the student to decide later on whether another course teaching that extra material is necessary?
Finally, you do realize, don't you, that there is nothing preventing a shop or individual instructor from packaging training any way that will work for a student, and charging whatever the student is willing to pay? Adding nitrox to the OW course, for example, is already a standard option for PADI.
Yup. It’s probably not perfect, but it goes a lot farther towards that.GUE Rec 1?1?
Did you ever think that the fact that ALL agencies do it might indicate that they see something good about it? You still have not explained what is wrong with having different courses to teach different skills.And yes I know all agencies do piecemeal, but Put Another Dollar In is the flag ship and originator for this, so the moniker stuck, that goes back way before my (or your) time anyway.