Lord help them if they give you a confused look. At that point, exclaim "oh sh!t! I left my cat in the oven to dry off" and run out the door.This is definitely part of what I'm looking for, as I want to work on my buoyancy and trim as early as possible. Is there a way to ask the instructor about this? Would I literally say "do you teach neutrally buoyant" and expect them to know what I'm asking about?
Ask the instructor about how many hours and how much compensation they receive. It should come out to at least minimum wage, but that's not always true. This is one reason you get max ratios in courses. There are all sorts of expenses associated with a course: equipment, gas fills, insurance, dues, course materials. I like to explain my costs and let my students decide if the hourly rate is fair or not.So this is actually an interesting point. The SSI shop is $425 for the course plus that $275 equipment fee, which (coincidentally?) works out to $700. The PADI shop is around $500 I think.. Today I called two more shops, and one (SSI/PADI) was $650, while the other (SDI) was around $400 but then was an additional $220 to get into the park for the OW part, and then additional fees on top of that. So I think those are roughly the prices around here and that $425 price tag does seem like a carrot to get you in the door. But maybe I'm just paranoid at this point. You all made a very valid point (several times) that it's about the instructor, so I'm going to withhold making a decision until I chat with both.
EDIT #2: If you have no objections to FB, check out these videos of Ryan @custureri in Ft. Lauderdale. AQUI Water Sports – Videos