Ugh... now it's becoming the "instructor vs. agency vs. greedy, money-hungry diveshop owner" debate.
Sorry, couldn't resist. Again, thanks for your thoughts.
My goal as an instructor is to educate students to become safe, responsible, and confident divers. In my preparation for the IDC, I am not having any trouble visualizing how I can incorporate
my own personal standards and expectations into the PADI system to achieve that goal. I may very well find that the reality of the situation is different with the boss breathing down my neck to expedite the course or the IDGAS attitude from a student who wants to just pay the money and get the card, but that will just add to the challenge... or so I hope.
Yes, the environment I will eventually be teaching in will be that warm and tropical one. I can see how teaching students in temperate waters requires a much different approach.
Thanks again.
A much different approach that PADI standards are not really designed for, but that some creative PADI instructors have founds ways around.
Thanks... again. It's great when these discussions unravel in such a way... Too bad we can't have it over a beer or two.
Your first point... This idea ventures into the realm of elaborating on a standard compared to exceeding a standard. There is nothing stopping a PADI instructor from having a student remove, replace, and clear a mask a dozen times during an OW course even if the standard only requires him/her to show mastery once. Yes, this is done at the discretion of the instructor, not agency mandated [edit], but also not prohibited by the agency.
Point two... basically a repeat of a previous post I addressed to you. Agencies set their standards. There is no "minimum" about it... there is just the standard. If hypothetical agency X requires their instructors (at their discretion) to teach beyond their stated standards, than what good are their standards in the first place? I know we are infringing on semantics here, and you did make your point about where you are coming from in a previous post, so perhaps I'm just being overly picky about the wording of "minimum standards"... I do that sometimes and I don't wish to belabour the issue.
I can, however, infer from your posts that you believe PADI's standards are insufficient, especially for the environment in which you dive. In my attempt to find that middle-ground and completely avoid, at all costs, any agency-bashing, I know that I can very easily incorporate my own personal goals into the system established by PADI to teach a student to become that safe, confident, and responsible diver we all hope to certify.
Here is where we part company. If you consider that to be agency bashing, I'm sorry ... I just see it as the cold, hard, facts. PADI standards do not create a diver who, to my way of thinking, is ready to dive in the North Atlantic, Northern California, or for that matter Hawaii. I could not, in good conscience run a course under PADI standards and certify divers who only met PADI's minimum standards.
Believe me, I do not hold up any one source of information (an agency Instructor Manual, in this case) with reverence as if it were some sort of all-encompassing fountain of inerrant knowledge.
Cheers
Neither do I.
From what I have gathered, there are agencies that allow for additional information to be taught. Others require the instructors to certify anyone who can complete the minimum requirements.
Okay, so we see a need for change in training.
1. Is there anything we can do to improve new diver knowledge of skills and information short of blowing off the "minimum" rule?
We've had this discussion before, and the bottom line is that there are individuals who feel that they can, within the PADI framework, sea-lawyer and squirm their way through and produce a competent diver within the spirit (if not the text) of PADI's standards. To my way of thinking: why bother? Why teach through and agency that does not trust your judgment to do the best that you know how for your students?
2. Is there any way to even prepare a new diver for every possible scenario (s)he may encounter?
No, but you can prepare them to meet a large percentage of them and to recognize and avoid the rest.
3. Understanding that the dive industry is run by consumers (those who buy products: training and equipment), how would changing the standards affect the industry?
This assumes that said consumers are told the truth and are thus capable of making such decisions. I think that it is pretty clear that someone who is completely naive of all things diving is not really in a position to properly make such decisions. I find the ski industry model, where my instructor is completely separate from the ski shop, a much more honest approach.
4. When new training agencies do pop up with higher standards (whether we agree with all of the standards or not), why are these agencies ridiculed (i.e. GUE...please understand this is an example)?
-Jeremy
Because they are doing what the "majors" can not and are putting the lie to the whole business.
...
Here is my challenge - how and where do we compile accident and fatality stats based upon the individual's certification agency? DAN's stats deal with certification levels, not with NAUI vs SSI, etc..
BTW, I know that such a list of stats will
never be made. But I do have some bets...
Back when there was a real difference between the agencies PADI fought tooth and nail to assure that such stats were never compiled. But I can tell you that PADI, in the late 1970s, in response to a plethora of in-training fatalities made major changes in their program and, low and behold, there was a large reduction in such incidents.
But there has to be an end to OW training. If mastery of tide tables is required, perfect buoyancy, perfect fin technique, absolute mastery of every possible skill and the program will never end. It would be strictly at the whim of the instructor. "Oops! I think I saw a little silt! Let's try again next week." And on and on.
That isn't what PADI intends and they won't allow an instructor to require it. Good for them!
Except that they set the bar way too low.
We'd all have to fin like the guys on You-Tube if we were to follow this level of mastery and that is complete nonsense for an OW diver. Further, I doubt that mastery could be achieved in only 4 OW dives. Who cares what a diver can do in the pool? Most pools don't have silt.
Again, here's where we part company. It is quite possible to turn out a class that can fin like the guys on You-Tube, etc. Yes it takes more than 4 dives, yes is takes more than the tiny bit of pool time the PADI course allocates. And yes, some people do care what divers can do in a pool, because it translates to the ocean, especially if their pool work is conducted in full gear.
There is a very long list of skills it would be nice to have. It is not necessary to have them all taught in OW.
Richard
We seem to disagree not only on the list of skills but on the level at which all of the skills should be performed.
There's a key difference, and it highights a major problem.
In the 1970's when I was a life guard, ARC taught you to be a lifeguard - very generic and the training covered the skills needed in pools, lakes beaches - but was also consistent with the highest industry stnadards of the day. What they are doing now is better in the sense that it does a much better job of meeting the specialized needs that have developed today.
Yes, I went down to LA as a Red Cross Water Safety Instructor, but I still had to go through L.A. County Lifeguard training before I could work a beach there.
Over the same period of time, diving instruction has changed, but has been dumbed down in terms of what is commonly taught.
Back in the day we had "Basic" scuba, "Open Water" and "Advanced Open Water" and Basic pretty much prepared you to dive under controlled and non challenging conditions under the supervison of someone else. Open Water prepared you to be a fully independent and knowlable diver able to assess the conditions relative to your limits and conduct your own dives safely. Advanced Open Water aded to that by expanding your limits a bit.
Today, the PADI OW standards are so low that I'd argue they are closer to the older Basic standards and at best a modern AOW class might get you close to where a 70's or 80's era OW class may have gotten you - but that's really being very charitable when you see divers being cranked through OW and AOW and coming out the other end with no real mastery of skills and no real experience.
Actually they are way below the old "Basic Diver" standards which included, for example, tired diver assists and full rescue of an unconscious diver from the bottom.
Now, in a sense that has been in response to the growth in the tourist dive industry, and on the face of it, there is nothing wrong with that - but call it what it is and market it acordingly. It is in essence a "tourist diver" certification comparable to the older Basic certification and shoudl not be promoted as an OW cert.
Yes.
Agreed.
ARC is the same way a different certification for those who will only guard up to 4 feet of water (Shallow Water Attendant), Full-pool Lifeguard, Waterpark Lifeguard and Waterfront Lifeguard.
Each new level offers new challenges. SCUBA is the same. Basic certification would be suffecient if all environments were the same and the students were taught there in. As several number of factor can change a dive site from hour-to-hour, something extra
may be needed. I am only familiar with SDI's OW course, so I can not speak for other agencies, but the OW course I received could have prepared me more.
Perhaps it is in the business model that I was not where I wanted to be until after "Rescue Diver."
Where you wanted to be is, delightfully, just about where the old, "Basic Diver" would have put you.