Me and my dive buddy need to get really good at using our Dive compasses. Not that I don't appreciate the dive guides supplied by the Dive boat, But I just hate not knowing where the Heck I am and most importantly having No Idea where the boat is. Any Advise on good online teaching resources.
I like the first two posts and I would recommend both. Land based compass use is much more involved because you learn how to triangulate your position on a map using geographical features etc. but the fundamental use of a compass is similar and learning how to use a compass on land will give you more time to become competent using the tool.
For diving purposes, in my opinion, you should take a navigation specialty. Really take the
specialty, not the adventure dive, and you MUST take this specialty with an instructor who is passionate about it and a GOOD navigator themselves.
The standard (imo) provides a decent starting point for a specialty. What it misses is the element of navigating in task loading situations and/or assigning team members different tasks in order to lower task loading for everyone. This is where most things in diving start to go wrong (losing situational awareness, losing buoyancy control, losing buddy contact, getting lost) etc because of juggling too many tasks at once.
This omission is something that I believe is missing throughout most non-technical diver training. As a PADI instructor I can't go too far with this but I can, for example, do some "blue water" (or in our case "green water") swimming so the students need to maintain depth, tempo, buddy contact AND direction at the same time. This is something I'm particularly good at so I offer these as "extra" experience dives once the student has achieved the certification requirements.
Last year, after doing this with one of my students I was cleaning up after the dives and overheard them telling the shop owner that he had gone from being completely dependent on a guide to being (in his words) a "real diver" in the span of 6 dives. All of that was based on his new navigation skills and learning a bit about diving in a team in a non-trivial setting.
So yeah, take a navigation specialty but look for an instructor who is passionate about teaching it.
R..