BiggDawg:The OW certification was never meant to create a perfect diver. It only means that the diver no longer needs an instructor or divemaster holding his (or her) hand to descend and ascend. The only way a diver gets better is by diving.
FIXXERVI6:I disagree, I've seen plenty of carded divers that did need help ascending and descending, and a 12 foot deep pool allows a diver to gain experience and confidence, yes its not the same as a 30 or 90 foot dive,
Quite a different issue. Whether the diver can do a good job ascending or descending is not the issue. Without the OW training, the only way they are allowed to do so is with a babysitter, holding hands literally.
All the C-card does is allows them some autonomy, in preparation for practice and improvement.
No, of course I wouldn't want the untrained to operate on me. Isn't that what I said? But remember the entire quote (not edited and taken out of context). The OW C-card represents:FIXXERVI6:but would you want someone operating on you when they had only 6 months of schooling or 6 years of schooling, yes all new OW divers will need improvement, but there is no reason why training shouldn't be able to crank out a diver that does not plow throught the bottom damaging everything they get close to, I dont' care how good of an instructor you have the minimum pool time required is not enough to get the job done.
I don't want the newest surgeon, but I'm not about to tell the AMA or state boards that their requirements are not sufficient. They stand as the reputable accrediting agencies, as do the certification agencies for recreational diving. They have determined the minimum level required for some autonomy. Notice, no one said "Optimal," or "maximum." It is the amount required to go and get more experience.the bare minimum as established by the reputable accrediting agencies to begin on the long road toward perfection. Every one was new, once, be they diver or driver, pilot or surgeon.
Excellent suggestion. What can I say? Choice is always good.FIXXERVI6:what I want to see offered up is a CHOICE as I also stated before, this will not reduce the number of divers, but given a choice for better education, it WILL increase the number of OW divers not destroying these reefs they are interested in preserving,
Unfortunately, it is also somewhat Quixotic. It is the available choice, between longer and more involved training, and the (for better or worse) accelerated/abbreviated course that the public is exercising their choice, and it is not, apparently, in favor of the more rigorous option. Those offering the more difficult course (your University, for example, as well as mine) are not seeing a flood of applicants.
If the course is longer, how will people know if they want to try? Normally risk-averse people will avoid taking longer scuba courses until they know that they like it. This is a basic cost/demand function. The higher the cost (be that in dollars, time, or both) the fewer will pursue the training, but that decrease in demand comes at a rate faster than the increase in cost. In other words, of "a unit" of increased cost, there will be more than a unit's decrease in demand.
There is absolutely no evidence that more commitment required to get certified will generate more commitment to diving. Besides, didn't you want to thin the ranks, anyway? Why not stop those who aren't interested before they even get certified? I recommend to potential diving students that they take a Discover Diving course or a resort course before making the commitment to OW training.
as I asked before:FIXXERVI6:As I stated in a previous post, maybe the sport as a whole is too bloated and thats part of the problem, you HAVE to have this volume to maintain such a bloated industry,
BiggDawg:Why does this discussion always start to sound like, "Now that I'm certified, I got mine. Every body else needs to jump through more and bigger hoops!"
I have no doubt that you jumped through more hoops, and I have no doubt that you are a very good diver. But:FIXXERVI6:I did jump through beigger whoops than most of the OW divers out there, and when I hit the water I noticed very quickly that my time spent was worth it, also, what if the option of extended training caused a small percentage of the divers that get cranked out to be better, that will INCREASE the overall diver awarness that hey, maybe I need more training cause joe over there took that extended class and he's rockin on.!"
All the pool time in the world will not create a diver who doesn't silt the bottom. I have never seen anyone who could silt the bottom of a pool. Conceivably, it could actually hurt the student divers' skills: "Wow! I'm silting up the cave! Funny, that never happened in all those hours in the pool!"BiggDawg:All of the classes in the world won't make a lousy diver, or one who is careless, a better diver. ... we do need divers following "Dive only within your limits, experience, and training. Know your limits."
Like it or not, bouyancy and fin control come from actually diving. How do you practice staying level for an ascent and a 15' safety stop in a 12' pool? Like it or not, I have actually heard surgeons say (tongue in cheek, I hope) that "you gotta' kill a few to get good at it."
BiggDawg:For those who were certified in a University setting, don't compare that with current recreational requirements. The University had its own agenda in making a Phys Ed course rigorous enough for the academic community and academic credit, be it a course in Scuba or a course in archery.
Okay, you can compare anything you want, including apples and oranges.FIXXERVI6:Why can't I compare it to current requirements, I have the same card as everyone else that took an express NAUI OW class, some of the people I dive with also took classes in the university setting and guess what, even fresh out of class they hit the water and you can see very quickly the difference, its not super man compared to super newbie, but there is a difference, is it because they made it more regorous to meet a phys ed course, I think not, it was total time under water and being taught before being turned loose to open water, I never had to do push ups or swim double the speed of the agency standard.
Point was, you were qualified by the certifying agencies requirements long before you finished the course, with much less required. Yes, you have the same c-card as every one else; but you have more. The University course undoubtedly made you a better diver, and the others of the class as well. But you were a better diver because of the extra time and practice, not because it was a University course. Not all students learn the same way. Some time, you just have to turn them loose and let them dive. Let them practice, it's whence the skill comes, it's from where your skill came. That is the OW C-card, nothing more. But then, it doesn't purport to be anything more. The University course was a C-card and more.
And the University course was more rigorous not to make you a better diver, but because the University needed more rigour to meet their needs, not yours, and not the needs of NAUI. NAUI was done with your certification long before the University was.
BD