elitist.Not for some, I guess!
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elitist.Not for some, I guess!
That is, sadly, the belief of instructors who have never seen it done and therefore feel justified in refusing to give it a try.I'd personally love it if people learned that on their OW course. I'd also like them to do all skills neutral with good trim. Which is what I had to do when I did fundamentals. However it's totally unrealistic to expect that output standard from a recreation entry level OW course.
Verclich!elitist.
Spelling?Verclich!
That is, sadly, the belief of instructors who have never seen it done and therefore feel justified in refusing to give it a try.
I disagree: Trim is only important WHEN you propelling yourself. The submarine doesn't really worry about trim unless it's moving. Why should we? Airplane pilots never adjust trim when they are on the tarmac. For a diver, your trim or attitude in the water is important if you want to maintain any semblance of neutral buoyancy. If the thrust is not parallel to the bottom, then you'll have to adjust your buoyancy in order to compensate and then adjust it again when you slow down or stop. If your legs are down, even a bit, then you'll have to release air from your BCD as you swim and then put it back when you stop. If your legs are pointed up a bit, then the opposite happens. Get the trim right to begin with and the rest becomes easy.
My students don't seem to have an issue with it, so calling it unrealistic is over the top. Get the trim right first, and it's as easy as pie.
This post makes two fallacies.There is one agency that I know off which has standards which are strict when it comes to trim and buoyancy. That's GUE. I'm yet to meet a single fundamentals instructor with 100% pass rate or anything close to it. So either your standards are lower or you are better than pretty much every GUE instructor on the planet. I'm going to presume it's lower standards/expectations - if not start an agency and pass on the knowledge JJ has made plenty from doing so.
This post makes two fallacies.
1. I compares a GUE Fundamentals class (which was designed to prepare experienced divers for the rigors of cave diving training) with an introductory OW class. That is like a math teacher strutting around the department office bragging about how much more math his calculus students know than the Algebra I students.
2. It assumes a high failure rate in education is a good thing. It isn't. In a well designed curriculum, students who have the required prerequisite skills and who put in the required time and effort in the amount of time designed for course completion should complete the course satisfactorily. If there is a high failure rate in a course with properly screened students who are giving the expected effort, then either the expectations for the course are not realistic given the planned time (you can't teach Calculus I in a month), or the quality of instruction was not up to the par.