"reasonably comfortable, fluid, repeatable manner as would be expected of a diver at that certification level"
based on whose assessment? The new instructor that can't hold a 3 minute stop in trim and not vary more than a foot in depth?
Or maybe the one that has never seen a skill demo'd off one's knees and in fact can't imagine how to do it?
Or maybe the one that has never seen a frog kick used effectively?
Or the one that leads students single file in low vis and does not buddy them up on checkouts?
Those are the ones whose judgment should be trusted to decide mastery that likely requires the student to repeat the skill once on their knees without panicking and bolting like mine did and then move on to something else?
Because the more I dive locally that is what I see is the definition of "mastery". If it's not why are these people in open water?
And what about those who have no idea how to plan a dive without a DM yet they still have an Open Water card?
Dp they meet the definition of having mastered the material enough to warrant having that card?
The RSTC says no. But some agencies that supposedly are signatories to the RSTC say "Screw that, we got our money. Give em the card and try to get them back later. If they haven't gotten scared off. Or killed themselves."
based on whose assessment? The new instructor that can't hold a 3 minute stop in trim and not vary more than a foot in depth?
Or maybe the one that has never seen a skill demo'd off one's knees and in fact can't imagine how to do it?
Or maybe the one that has never seen a frog kick used effectively?
Or the one that leads students single file in low vis and does not buddy them up on checkouts?
Those are the ones whose judgment should be trusted to decide mastery that likely requires the student to repeat the skill once on their knees without panicking and bolting like mine did and then move on to something else?
Because the more I dive locally that is what I see is the definition of "mastery". If it's not why are these people in open water?
And what about those who have no idea how to plan a dive without a DM yet they still have an Open Water card?
Dp they meet the definition of having mastered the material enough to warrant having that card?
The RSTC says no. But some agencies that supposedly are signatories to the RSTC say "Screw that, we got our money. Give em the card and try to get them back later. If they haven't gotten scared off. Or killed themselves."