Not according to my preferences. My class would violate PADI standards.
I've seen instructors like that in all agencies as well, but the majority of the ones I've seen do not fit that mold.
Same here. The scary thing is that there are very large numbers who "do not fit that mold" think that they are doing a good job because they have NEVER, in fact, witnessed a good job.
Just out of curiosity, what would you like to do that would violate PADI standards?
Marcel
Order of skills, buoyant free ascents, choice of texts, choice of specific training materials, "certification" of assistants, skills and knowledge added that failure to learn will result in no certification, for that matter certification comes down, in the final analysis, the the staff's subjective judgement. Over the years I had several PADI certified divers apply for course credit here are a few examples:
1. I agreed to let the student take the written final and pool skill exam, she flunked both.
2. I offered to permit a student to challenge the course by take a swim test, free diving test, scuba test and final written exam. Would it surprise you to hear that he could not swim 400 meters?
3. A student, who was a PADI Instructor, wanted credit for PADI Open Water, PADI Advanced, and a couple of specialty courses. His request was based on the fact that all the course included material that we included in our class and they all added up to a bit more than 100 hours. He also wanted credit for PADI Assistant Instructor and PADI Instructor based on the AI and Instructor courses that we ran. If you want to read the details of the PADI courses on the ACE website, here a link.
He was looking for something like seven credits. I gave him the now standard deal, he did pass the swim test, but did very poorly on the final exam. He was not able to complete the confined water tests. He had the balls to complain to my Administration that that his prior training had not prepared him for either the written or pool exam, that he could not imagine anyone but a SEAL (his words not mine) could pass either, and so (ipso facto) I had to have been rougher on him than I was on "normal" students who took the course(s).
I was fortunate that the President’s wife had taken the 100 hr course a year before (she was a hot ticket, not the sort of thing I’d recommend for most people in their last 60s). She made it quite clear that I had asked this student to do anything that she had not been asked to do.
But he wouldn’t go away, he still wanted to know about the AI and Instructor credits. I told him that that was out of the question since the written exam that he flunked was the NAUI Master Diver Exam (conceptually the NAUI Instructor Exam without the teaching and NAUI sections). Even that did not end it, but he finally sort of just petered out and went away.