Bob DBF
Contributor
Strange that I didn’t see NAUI listed in the RSTC list of agencies.??
They joined in November 2015. News - WRSTC.
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Strange that I didn’t see NAUI listed in the RSTC list of agencies.??
Once upon a time you could read the Science of Skin and Scuba diving, (later “The New Science if Skin and Scuba Diving”), find a pool somewhere and do all the exercises they outlined, plus read all the physics and if you had good reading comprehension and actually did the in-water skills to full competency and didn’t lie to yourself you could learn everything you needed to know.
No. Not at all. Another diver could show them, or they could learn what is needed to dive by watching online videos, etc. That might be enough to be able to dive safely in ideal conditions.You mention teaching the diver some rules of physics that can't be ignored (don't hold your breath) and also mask /regulator recovery. My issue is, that is basically all a person learns in some open water courses. That info can only be learned in a certification course?
Poor instruction does not necessarily mean that the standards need to be raised. Ultimately, it's up to the dive op on how they teach. As far as I know, there aren't any Secret Students or audits ensuring that an agency affiliated trainer is teaching to standards. Unfortunately, it's up to students to report. That can be difficult as the student is likely not familiar with the standards.I was at a dive site in Cozumel and there were some newly certified divers that needed help getting the bc and reg setup properly. Certification standards need to be higher.
“Licenses, cert cards and permits, etc. are all just to verify that you did receive the proper amount of training to do whatever it is you're doing.”No, a cert card is not required to SCUBA dive. It's also not required to have a drivers license to drive, a pilot's licensee to pilot an aircraft, a permit to skydive, etc. etc. etc. That piece of plastic will never put air back in your tank when you run out at a hundred feet or deploy your reserve canopy. Licenses, cert cards and permits, etc. are all just to verify that you did receive the proper amount of training to do whatever it is you're doing. Yes, some things like driving or piloting require the card to be legal but it has nothing to do with the actual job of piloting, diving or driving, etc.
By the way: Comparing the lack of cert card while SCUBA diving to a lack of a parachute while parachuting is like comparing apples to sea urchins! Not even close! The lack of a cert card means I have no cert card. It does not mean I have no training or experience or proper equipment. It means I won't be able to buy air or go on the dive boat. That's it. Lack or a chute will most likely cause death.
However, even the lack or a parachute while skydiving isn't a death sentence. It can be done and has been done many times. During WWII, the Russians "perfected" a method for delivering ground troop's to the battlefield by air without landing and no parachutes. The pilots would fly along a ridge line as slow and low as they could. The soldiers would jump out onto the slope and slide down. The angle of the slope and depth of the snow cushioned their drop. Most of them survived! It's been done several times since by wing suit flyers landing in piles of cardboard boxes, water, etc.
Can such things be done? I suppose so, but they are, by law, required. Not so much in diving.No, a cert card is not required to SCUBA dive. It's also not required to have a drivers license to drive, a pilot's licensee to pilot an aircraft,
The Sonoma State University NAUI diving program used the NSoSSD as their text book. At least it was still used when Ron Hunt was in charge of the program up to a few years ago."The New Science if Skin and Scuba Diving" was how my old man learned, and he was my instructor, with a handful of dives. Due to gear constraints, we were only in the water together to practice buddy breathing. I kept diving he quit when he saw what he wanted. The same material was covered 17 years later in my OW course.
That book was the basis for all the training manuals in the new agencies that started. "The New Science if Skin and Scuba Diving" by the Conference for National Cooperation in Aquatics and was a collaboration of the most knowledgeable people in diving and education to produce a book to train divers so that the escalating deaths of scuba divers (interchangable with skin divers at the time) would be stopped. The first edition in 1958 did not have New in the title, that first appeared on the 1962 edition, which was the one I learned on in '62.