I have found this to be false. It was perpetuated in every NAUI ITC that I was a part of and I would like to see it stop. Just because a competitor says something about their rival, doesn't make it so. I've seen PADI instructors teach way out of the box, even to the point of me asking them if this is cool with PADI. The look I got was priceless, and he responded with an incredulous "You don't really believe all that crap, do you?" Oh, my. I was a bit embarrassed. I had been duped into believing disparaging myths from a competing agency. Consequently, I have tried to never make assumptions about what or how the other camp teaches. Odds are, my beliefs are simply regurgitating some other agency's propaganda. I can tell you what's expected of NASE, SDI/TDI, and Diveheart because I teach for them. I used to be able to comment about what NAUI teaches, but I'm sure they've changed some things since I abandoned them years ago, so I refrain. Why speak out of ignorance and half truths and continue the "Us vs Them" baditude? I'll let the PADI pros tell me what and how they teach, and I hope for the same courtesy when it's my turn to describe what I teach. It's like religion. I don't need you to tell me what I believe when I know precisely what that really entails. Go ahead and tell me your beliefs, but don't pigeon hole me with your distorted view of what you think I believe. Ask, listen and stop spreading rumors.Where the differences show up are in the flexibility the instructors have to go above and beyond
I have been a part of IDCs for three agencies now. Two of them dinged instructor candidates for not getting their students to kneel as they weren't "under control" when they were in the Scuba Position (horizontal). Early Scuba instruction was by ex-military demolition divers who often kneeled to complete their tasks. For them, being able to kneel was a part of learning to Scuba dive and the entire industry adopted that as a part of training. I have seen kneeling skills done by just about every agency that's active here in the US. I can't tell you how many times I've been called a liar when I tell other instructors I don't allow kneeling or lying on the bottom of the pool at any time by students in an OW class. I have been badgered with "How do you do it?", but there's no real answer to that other than "I simply do not allow them to kneel". There's no special sauce. You don't need to be an extraordinary instructor. You just need to set the example and let the concept of "Monkey see, monkey do" kick in. You can't teach what you don't do, though. A student can't be what they can't see. It doesn't matter whose aegis you teach under, but you can't impart skills you don't have or are too lazy to master. Students want to be JUST LIKE their instructor. So, play the part. Set the example. Have fun and hover like there's no tomorrow.Every active PADI instructor and DM received the training update in Undersea Journal this year that states we are to start teaching neutral.
Many of you know that I only teach NASE OW and you may wonder why. The reason is simple: they don't allow me to do a CESA vertically in open water. My students do them horizontally in the pool, and so I am not continuously subjected to rapid ascents. Ever wonder why instructors get bent more than the rest of the Scuba population? I sure do and I believe that multiple CESAs per class is the biggest and most preventable reason. Ear bends, barotraumas, actual DCS and more can easily be explained by doing 10 CESAs in a short amount of time. NASE's philosphy is simple: Every dive should consist of one descent and one ascent. Remember I posted about "Monkey see, monkey do"? My students want to be me, so if they see me doing multiple bounce dives, even in a training environment, what message am I sending them? That it's OK to break the rules? That I'm not subject to the laws of physics like everyone else? That bounce dives really aren't that bad? Egads! I need to set the example and NASE agrees. I like that. FWIW, it's my understanding that RAID and IANTD don't require open water CESAs either. I've heard that from their instructors, so I think it's probably true. I certainly wish that all agencies would adopt the no vertical CESA rule as it decimates our collective instructor corp.