Dive-aholic:Almost all people know how they learn best. Just talk to some instructors. Ask some basic questions. Ask how they like to conduct their classes. After 15 minutes or so, you should have a general feeling about the instructor and whether you want to pursue more interaction. You don't have to know anything about diving to know if you're going to click or clash with someone and the style of teaching. That goes for any discipline.
While this is good advice it is not a fool proof way of insuring you get a good instructor. When I did my OW a few years ago I didnt have a clue who the instructor was until we turned up on the first night. A lot of stores use part-time instructors who you would never meet whilst walking into a shop during the day. I was extremely lucky to get an excellent instructor and have continued to have that good luck.
My girlfriend on the other hand was not so lucky.
We lived in different cities and had a long distance relationship for the first 6 months and when she decided to do her OW course I of course wanted her to fly to Auckland, where I lived at the time, to do it with the shop I worked for and with one instructor I had in mind. However the logistics were too great (mainly the flying after diving) so I flew to [where she was living-dont want to say] to help her choose an instructor.
Anyway to cut a long story short she found a store she wanted to do her course in and the instructor had been diving for 40 years or so and instructing for 35. I was a little dubious at first as I know what the "old Cray divers" of New Zealand are like. Anyway he said all the right stuff and made all the right motions and my girl was happy so she signed up.
Any she had the choice of being certified NAUI or PADI and she chose PADI. During the course of the theory evenings she rang me and said all they were doing was watching videos and then expected to do a test at the end of each one. I told her this was rubbish and she should tell the instructor she was paying to be instructed, so start instructing. His reply to that was that she chose to do a PADI course and not a NAUI course and PADI chose to teach with videos only, whilst NAUI had actual instruction and if she wanted actual instruction she should have done a NAUI course.
So luckily we met up before her final exam and checkout dives and I spent a whole weekend teaching her the theory behind diving that she should have gotten from her course. When I started teaching her she was scared and confused about everything and by the end of the weekend she had theory down to a tee and was brimming with confidence.
She aced the exam with 100% and then proceeded with the checkout dives.
First dive, according to PADI standards is just a familiarisation dive right? So anyway they did skills on dive one. Dive four the instructor left her with the "Divemaster"- who was actually AOW- to do an 18 metre dive while he stayed with the rest of the class who he didnt feel should dive to 18 metres as they werent confident enough. Again, another breach of PADI standards.
After her course she was so excited as she had previously been quite scared and was really pleased she passed. I have to say at this point I was so proud of her for conquering both her fears and a crap instructor.
Right after the course I took a trip down to go diving with her and completely had to retrain her. The skills on the course were only glanced over and her buoyancy was not to the standard I expect someone to have when having just completed an OW course and she was definantly not as comfortable as she should be.
I am pleased to say now, 38 dives later she is one of the most superb and graceful divers I have ever had the pleasure of diving with outside of the tech realm. She can hold a safety stop in mid water with no visual reference except a depth gauge, to within a foot of her depth and can handle almost any challenge that is thrown at her. She has successfully got her Nitrox Cert, done most of her AOW, perfectly executed over a dozen 30 metre deep dives; done wall dives in mid water were the wall drops away to over 100 metres and simulated 6 decompression dives. Her goal is to finish her AOW and then start moving into the Tech realm within the next couple of years. I believe she will conquer that with hardly a blink. She is taking it slow and is loving her diving and enjoying every dive. She is also a budding naturalist and has far surpassed me in knowledge of the marine life we come across.
Her instructor was a little pissed at me as I wouldnt let her buy one of his big 7mm two piece farmer john wetsuits, and instead got her into a 7/5mm semi dry, I also got her a backplate & wing, instead of the Poseidon power lift he was trying to sell, and I also supplied her reg complete with long hose/ bungeed back up.
The instructor actually said to her one day that she owed him as they only teach the course so cheap so they can sell gear, and seeing as she didnt buy much gear of him she owed him.
Now he came across initially as a good instructor. He said all the right things and made all the right noises until the course started. Sometimes you can never tell!