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If a student is taught to stay ahead of the pressure exposure then their ears will NEVER hurt. Having student's ears hurt is, to my way of thinking, inexcusable incompetence.Believe me, for some people, for a variety of reasons (probably primarily task loading) clearing ears is hard and painful, even in a 13ft pool.
Try going up and down, somewhat uncontrolled, 30 times in 2 hours without clearing your ears and you will be in pain.
If an instructor can't teach that successfully they should find another line of work. If their course design does not permit the time and attention to assure that it does not occur, that course design should be scrapped.Somebody new to diving has often a lot of difficulty remembering all the things that need to be done in addition to being uncomfortable wearing (often an ill fitting rental) wetsuit, scuba gear, just having done skills like mask clearing and reg retrieval (so most likely got water up his/her nose). Then go up and down a bunch of times while trying to remember the inflate and deflate at the right time while losing control of one's buoyancy. No wonder the student forgets to clear, or clears too late.
If there is not enough time in a course to assure that ear clearing is taught properly, and to the point where it is second nature, that course should be seriously revamped ... what other critical items are being given short shrift?t takes a fair amount of time for most people to get comfortable enough in the water to clear in a timely fashion.
WeekendDiver