I think everyone who talks about how much better things were in the good old days should read this history of NAUI, written in part by its primary founder, All Tillman (NAUI Instructor #1). Here are several points from that history that are important for this discussion.
1. NAUI (and many other agencies) have always allowed individual instructors to teach whatever they want to teach (and require it for certification) as long as the class as a whole met their minimum standards. Therefore, the course any individual took may have been significantly different from a course someone else took. An example many people cite about instruction back in those days is the tearing off of students' masks and the surprise shutting off of their air. In describing the meeting of instructors that led to the creation of NAUI in 1960 in Houston, Tillman talks about how the leaders were surprised to see some of the instructors doing that stuff. He said that it seemed to be more for the pleasure of the instructor than for the benefit of the student. So, yes, some classes included that sort of harassment, but not all did, and those that did it were probably in the minority.
2. NAUI instructors liked to hand students their certification cards when the students completed the class, so NAUI headquarters sent out the cards when the students enrolled in the training. The problem is that some of the students were getting the cards before they completed their training. In fact, some of them got cards without doing any training at all. This great inconsistency was a problem that plagued them for a long time.
3. The Advanced Open Water certification was created by the Los Angeles County program in the mid 1960s to introduce divers to a variety of different aspects of diving in the hope that it would improve the low rate of diver retention. NAUI followed suit. PADI did not add AOW until later.
4. Looking back on the founding of NAUI from decades later, the authors said that the average student leaving the OW classes now is a better diver than the instructors were when NAUI was founded.
1. NAUI (and many other agencies) have always allowed individual instructors to teach whatever they want to teach (and require it for certification) as long as the class as a whole met their minimum standards. Therefore, the course any individual took may have been significantly different from a course someone else took. An example many people cite about instruction back in those days is the tearing off of students' masks and the surprise shutting off of their air. In describing the meeting of instructors that led to the creation of NAUI in 1960 in Houston, Tillman talks about how the leaders were surprised to see some of the instructors doing that stuff. He said that it seemed to be more for the pleasure of the instructor than for the benefit of the student. So, yes, some classes included that sort of harassment, but not all did, and those that did it were probably in the minority.
2. NAUI instructors liked to hand students their certification cards when the students completed the class, so NAUI headquarters sent out the cards when the students enrolled in the training. The problem is that some of the students were getting the cards before they completed their training. In fact, some of them got cards without doing any training at all. This great inconsistency was a problem that plagued them for a long time.
3. The Advanced Open Water certification was created by the Los Angeles County program in the mid 1960s to introduce divers to a variety of different aspects of diving in the hope that it would improve the low rate of diver retention. NAUI followed suit. PADI did not add AOW until later.
4. Looking back on the founding of NAUI from decades later, the authors said that the average student leaving the OW classes now is a better diver than the instructors were when NAUI was founded.