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That’s not what I said and you can believe anything that you want.beach89:So no GUE trained diver has ever died while diving? I find that hard to believe.
That is the length of the courses that the science community has been running since 1952. No one has ever died of boredom (or of any other cause for that matter, a claim that the 20 hour wonder courses can't make). But once again, you can believe anything that you want. You must be very important if you can't spare 100 hours for training, we had a university Vice President you was ablt to find the time.beach89:Increasing the certification time to 100 hours is excessive and would probably kill the sport. I know that I would never be diving if I had to go through a 100 hour course. I would get bored to death, and I don't have 100 hours of free time. I also find that hard to believe.
When I learned to fly I got about 150 hours of instruction, which served me very well. My Dad and my uncles (all of whom where pilots during WWII and flight instructors during Korea) thought that the program that I was in was the right way to go.beach89:A pilot's license takes 35 hours. Are you saying that diving is three times as hard? Or that there is three times the amount of information to learn?
When you discover the writings of Glen Egstrom you will learn that it takes a minimum of 17 repetitions of moderately complex skills to have 95% confidence that they will be correctly performed by students.beach89:I got my certification in about 20 hours total. Am I going to die while diving at 60ft because I didn't practice drills 20+ times? Probably not. Will practicing 20 times do any better than practicing something 5 times, as long as I get it? .
When you discover the writings of Glen Egstrom you will learn that it takes a minimum of 17 repetitions of moderately complex skills to have 95% confidence that they will be correctly performed by students. Till you discover that I hope that you do not have the opportunity to discover where your skills are lacking. BTW, I made no mention of 100 hours DIR-F courses, I have no idea if there is such a thing. I am not a GUE diver or Instructor, but I have seen their product and it is a program that works.beach89:It's great that going through a 100 hour DIR-F course makes you feel like a better diver. But I really don't need to be a DIR-F diver, or go through 100 hours of certification time, to do the kind of recreational diving that I like to do. So stop trying to force that **** on me (even though I'm already certified, so even if you did make 100hr classes mandatory; it wouldn't affect me. But I digress) .
Perhaps they don’t care for you as much as you think, perhaps they have no idea of what they’re talking about, I don’t know.beach89:My dad and three of my uncles were all certified back in the 70s when 100 hour OW-AOW-Rescue-All-in-one classes were the norm, along with hard physical challenges (long swims/tread water) that some divers here are calling for. They all thought that 100 hour certification classes were way too long. 3/4 were instructors. None of them had any problem with me taking a two day class.
The 100 hour mark is one that has been developed and tested over the course of 50 odd years by the people who invented diving and diver training. That is their consensus. Feel free to differ.beach89:But, I will end this by saying that everybody is different. Some people need 20 hours to get down the basics; others need 50 hours. Some may need 100 hours to master the fundamentals; others may need 150 hours. Instructors need to spend more time with people who aren't ready. Take a private pool session or something. Don't send people out once they hit the magic x hour mark.