SeaHound
Contributor
Hello -
My journey into SCUBA began in 2001 and today I am an AOW with some specialty certifications. Over this time I have encountered some poor training methods, financially motivated business malpractices as well as some dive-shops / instructors who were crooks to say the least. Based on my limited personal experience and limited training, I have thought how we can improve training of divers.
I am pointing out in SCUBA curriculum/diver training issues that I see as problems. I am hoping that divers with more experience, especially instructors and industry professionals can give their insights into what is a good idea and what isnt from what follows.
1) NO SCUBA "CRASH-COURSE" PLEASE: There are a lot of dive shops that proudly advertise "EARN YOUR CERTIFICATION IN TWO DAYS!" Most of these dive shops are situated in places where influx of diving tourism is so much they want to maximize profits by reducing the training time spent on each student. Once they have your money, they want you to get out of the shop ASAP so that new students can come in. Instructors have the "assembly line" mindset where maximum certifications in minimum time is the formula for success of dive shop.
I think this is a recipe for producing incompetent divers who will put their lives in danger along with other people. Imagine if pilots were trained like that! Or brain surgeons or anyone else who is handling a potential life and death situation.
Any thoughts on now the above can be rectified?
When I was an Open Water diver with twelve dives, I was diving with a woman who was an ADVANCED OPEN WATER. She would jump into the sea with so much lead that by fully inflating her BCD she would become neutrally buoyant at depth. Very poor swimming and very bad buoyancy. I asked where she got her certification and she said she was the product of a 2 day SCUBA course in Thailand.
2) RESTRUCTURING OF OPEN WATER AND ADVANCED OPEN WATER
I feel this is strongly needed because the way these courses are taught presently, it seems like students are paying money to learn in Advanced what they should have learnt in basic OW. I mean what do you mean by selling PEAK PERFORMANCE BUOYANCY to a certified diver? Kidding me??? That only means that PADI and the affiliated dive shop will allow you to get certified with bad buoyancy so that you can be charged money later to correct this training deficiency. Same is with specialties like BOAT DIVING or SHORE DIVING. Doesn't make any sense! First a guy becomes a certified diver and after getting his certification he is going to learn how to jump from a boat???
In order to get the ADVANCED OPEN WATER a diver should have a minimum of 20 dives in 60 ft depth. These should include the following:
Deep Dives
Nitrox
Navigation
Drift
Night
plus some reading on Altitude diving
I feel that ADVANCED OPEN WATER training should also include RESCUE DIVER course. Since the motivation behind rescue course is to be able to save lives, the more people who know these skills the better / safer your dive boats become.
Beyond AOW+RESCUE we could have Specialties that are true specialities and not someone charging you for basic open water skills. These are:
dry suit
ice diving
photography
search and rescue
wreck or cave penetration
These would add additional skills and equipment know-how beyond what just makes a good diver. Beyond these we can have training for professionals like DM course or Instructor course etc.
Please let me know your thoughts.
Thanks
My journey into SCUBA began in 2001 and today I am an AOW with some specialty certifications. Over this time I have encountered some poor training methods, financially motivated business malpractices as well as some dive-shops / instructors who were crooks to say the least. Based on my limited personal experience and limited training, I have thought how we can improve training of divers.
I am pointing out in SCUBA curriculum/diver training issues that I see as problems. I am hoping that divers with more experience, especially instructors and industry professionals can give their insights into what is a good idea and what isnt from what follows.
1) NO SCUBA "CRASH-COURSE" PLEASE: There are a lot of dive shops that proudly advertise "EARN YOUR CERTIFICATION IN TWO DAYS!" Most of these dive shops are situated in places where influx of diving tourism is so much they want to maximize profits by reducing the training time spent on each student. Once they have your money, they want you to get out of the shop ASAP so that new students can come in. Instructors have the "assembly line" mindset where maximum certifications in minimum time is the formula for success of dive shop.
I think this is a recipe for producing incompetent divers who will put their lives in danger along with other people. Imagine if pilots were trained like that! Or brain surgeons or anyone else who is handling a potential life and death situation.
Any thoughts on now the above can be rectified?
When I was an Open Water diver with twelve dives, I was diving with a woman who was an ADVANCED OPEN WATER. She would jump into the sea with so much lead that by fully inflating her BCD she would become neutrally buoyant at depth. Very poor swimming and very bad buoyancy. I asked where she got her certification and she said she was the product of a 2 day SCUBA course in Thailand.

2) RESTRUCTURING OF OPEN WATER AND ADVANCED OPEN WATER
I feel this is strongly needed because the way these courses are taught presently, it seems like students are paying money to learn in Advanced what they should have learnt in basic OW. I mean what do you mean by selling PEAK PERFORMANCE BUOYANCY to a certified diver? Kidding me??? That only means that PADI and the affiliated dive shop will allow you to get certified with bad buoyancy so that you can be charged money later to correct this training deficiency. Same is with specialties like BOAT DIVING or SHORE DIVING. Doesn't make any sense! First a guy becomes a certified diver and after getting his certification he is going to learn how to jump from a boat???

In order to get the ADVANCED OPEN WATER a diver should have a minimum of 20 dives in 60 ft depth. These should include the following:
Deep Dives
Nitrox
Navigation
Drift
Night
plus some reading on Altitude diving
I feel that ADVANCED OPEN WATER training should also include RESCUE DIVER course. Since the motivation behind rescue course is to be able to save lives, the more people who know these skills the better / safer your dive boats become.
Beyond AOW+RESCUE we could have Specialties that are true specialities and not someone charging you for basic open water skills. These are:
dry suit
ice diving
photography
search and rescue
wreck or cave penetration
These would add additional skills and equipment know-how beyond what just makes a good diver. Beyond these we can have training for professionals like DM course or Instructor course etc.
Please let me know your thoughts.
Thanks
