I would completely agree!One last thought, a compass becomes the most useless piece of equipment on you if you didn't take a reading before you either splashed or headed away from the downline.
... and centered. Those are the two biggest mistakes I see. Then as @lowvis attested to, becoming so fixated on the bearing that you don't see much else.Biggest problem for me seemed to be keeping compass level
Best way to deal with currents and have fun at the same time!Then you swim to that target and repeat.
The best instructors are the ones that evaluate the student and teach to their weaknesses as well as to what they hope to accomplish. This requires some flexibility and actually diving with the student before you pop into teaching mode. You already know about navigation? Cool... let's up the ante and get you out of your comfort zone. No, I can't just take you at your word, but it should be fairly easy to ascertain where you are at. Then just tailor the class to meet the student's needs and objectives.The only thing that matters is to have someone get you out of your comfort zone and help you find the things you could improve on.
Navigation in the Keys is a bit different from navigation else where. Most dives are shallow and ducking out of currents mean that you're not going to be able to swim a straight line anywhere. So students learn to head into the current and when they hit their turn pressures, one does a "commando peek" and gets a compass heading to the boat. All I ask is that they find the anchor line or the boat. No real need to lead the current, since it should be sending you right back to the boat. I don't think any of my AOW students have needed to take an additional course to be able to navigate.