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tndiveinstruct1:If the agencies' material was that different, then there wouldn't be, IMHO, the ability for instructors from one agency to be able to crossover and become an instructor for another agency so easily. Of course, some remediation might be necessary.
From an instructor's perspective, the difference is not so much in what gets taught, but in how it gets taught.
To place some context around my thoughts, I spent about a year DM'ing for instructors from NAUI, PADI, SSI, and YMCA as a self-imposed "apprenticeship" in order to decide whether or not I wanted to become an instructor. So I got some exposure to the different agency standards as well as the approaches used by various instructors.
Generally speaking, PADI teaches more by rote ... lots of emphasis on how to do a particular skills than on the theory behind why you're doing it. NAUI places more of an emphasis on the "why" aspect.
When you take a NAUI class you'll spend more time talking about, for example, Boyle's Law ... and how it pertains to the diving skills you'll be learning. PADI's material focuses more on the mechanics of what to do as you're descending/ascending to deal with pressure changes.
In effect, they cover the same topic ... but from different angles. In the end, how effective the training will be for you ... as an individual ... depends on whether you learn best by analyzing or by doing.
Ultimately I chose NAUI for my instructor training ... not because I thought they were necessarily better than PADI, but because NAUI's teaching approach leaves me more room to add material to the "required" curriculum, and to tailor the sequence of presenting the curriculum to what I perceive to be the needs and goals of my students ... whereas PADI requires the subject matter to be presented in a specific sequence. There is a logic to the PADI presentation ... but I prefer having the "freedom to teach" that the NAUI approach affords.
Ultimately, it really does boil down to the instructor/student relationship. If you really connect with an instructor ... if you can hear and understand what they're teaching ... and if they are diligent in how they teach ... then either approach will afford you a good educational experience.
One thing I'll offer, however is that the instructor isn't the most important consideration ... that would be your desire to learn, and your willingness to put effort into the course. During my "apprenticeship", I DM'd for about 20 Open Water classes. Without exception ... and regardless of agency or instructor ... the students who came out with the best skills were the ones who put the most effort into learning what they were being taught.
It's your money, your effort, and your safety that's on the line ... ultimately you have more control over how much you will get out of the class than either the agency or the instructor. That, of course, assumes that the instructor is competent and is presenting the material according to the policies and procedures of the agency he or she is teaching for.
... Bob (Grateful Diver)