NWGratefulDiver:Besides, given the current, limited supply of GUE instructors I... Bob (Grateful Diver)
just out of interest, about how many GUE instructors are there out there Bob? I have never heard anyone quote a figure..
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NWGratefulDiver:Besides, given the current, limited supply of GUE instructors I... Bob (Grateful Diver)
http://www.gue.com/info/instruct.shtmlcancun mark:just out of interest, about how many GUE instructors are there out there Bob? I have never heard anyone quote a figure..
cancun mark:just out of interest, about how many GUE instructors are there out there Bob? I have never heard anyone quote a figure..
Fair enough, Bob. I in no way meant any disrespect to any of the excellent instructors that are not DIR or trained by GUE.NWGratefulDiver:There are other alternatives ...
Not everyone who teaches at GUE shops is a GUE instructor ... and those non-GUE instructors who teach OW classes are generally very good, and teach in a way that prepares their OW grads for DIR-F. If you take an OW class at 5th D, for example, you will be taking it from an SSI instructor. That doesn't mean the class is somehow deficient ... far from it, it's an excellent curriculum.
Besides, given the current, limited supply of GUE instructors I can't see them spending a lot of time teaching OW classes. There seems to be enough demand out there for DIR-F and above to keep them plenty busy.
There are also lots of non-DIR instructors out there who provide great OW training, and many well-trained divers out there who have never taken a DIR class.
It's a mistake to assume that everyone who signs up for DIR-F does so because they feel that their OW training was deficient ... in many cases it's just because they're motivated to learn more.
... Bob (Grateful Diver)
headhunter:I was not GUE trained and am in no way unhappy with the basic instruction that I received from either my original instructor in 1979 or in a different instructor in 1985. I am an example of someone who, as you put it, is "motivated to learn more". I think that I have a lot to learn by taking a DIR-F class and that my overall ability will be greatly enhanced through striving to meet the objectives outlined in the class. The overall philosophy parallels the philosophy from my original training and therefore is in keeping with my own views on diving in general.
headhunter:I believe you can teach an old dog new tricks!
jonnythan:
cancun mark:WHEN LIFE HANDS YOU A LEMON, BUST OUT THE TEQUILA AND SALT
That's what I'd like to find in an instructor for my friends in the Los Angeles area. I also think that this is what CALI68 is looking for.NWGratefulDiver:I've been doing a bit of "team-teaching" with another NAUI instructor lately. Our philosophy is to prepare our students (at whatever level we're teaching) so that if they do take DIR-F they won't be inclined to ask "why has no one ever taught me this before"?
Which isn't to say we teach DIR-F skills ... only that we teach in a way that aligns with the skills and philosophy you would get by taking the DIR-F class.
WOOF!!!NWGratefulDiver:Yes, but the trick is to teach him to think like a young dog ...
... Bob (Grateful Diver)
headhunter:WOOF!!!
Christian