fins wake:Using pre- and postrequisites, the instructor must be among other things, be a certified TecDeep diver himself, i.e. pass the actual course. This has historically not always been the case for technical cross-over programs, as you (should) well know. Also, to complete the final exam. This written exam has so far proven to be quite the equalizer ... very few instructors have passed it, at least in Northern Europe.
An instructor who meets the other requirements and holds an equivilant certification from another agency can take the written tests (standards and theory), turn in a peer skill eveluation and become a tec rec instructor. I agree that with some of the other agencie all you need is a freind who's an IT and you're in.
That's fair enough. Personally, I do have some problems with the evaluation, however. Let's take the following examples:
Well, it's actually an option on page 128. This is not how I was trained on the course, however. I agree the pictures and text on page 128 of the manual is a slam-dunk for rival agencies. The sooner they change this for the next edition, the better. But as I stated, I wasn't trained this way.
Again I realize that a good instructor can correct things like this. The instructor could also explain away the fact that all the pictures in the book show really poor technique and have his students do things different. As a PADI instructor I got fed up with having to make excuses for them. I really think it's important. Why wouldn't they picture a diver off the bottom and horizontal deploying a bag or donating the long hose?
I feel very strongly that no tech manual should show divers on their knees. In a course at this level there isn't any reason for the student to ever touch the bottom and they should know that from the start.
That's fine. I'm merely providing a 2nd opinion, that's all. And I still think it would be helpful taking the course before commenting with authority on all issues.
I couldn't take the course because I use trimix at those depths these days. I don't want to argue the deep air thing here but I choose not to take students to 165 ft on air.
It's just that comments like and are very, how shall I put it, neo-irvinian in nature, and not really conductive to reasoned argument. That rather gives a feeling of "PADI-bashing, same, same but different".
Respectfully yours
Fins
Point taken. I could have left out the clueless comments.
It's just that in the years that I've been asiciated with PADI I've been convinced that they really don't know what a diver should look like in the water and that their standards don't require or help a diver get there. That's what I mean when I say I don't think they get it. Yes their instructors can cover for them but in this regard I really don't think they should have to.
Some might argue that a recreational diver on a guided dive in the Caribbean doesn't need very good technique (though I'd disagree), there just isn't any way, IMO, to make that arguement in technical diving.
There are just some very fundimental and very important things (mostly related to technique) that PADI doesn't mention or require at any level of training.
Every diver depicted in the DSAT book would be incapable of anti silting techniques because their fins are always pointed down. These are the skills that a diver needs to get squared away before ever doing a deep dive at all.
I'm sure that any good instructor will see to that but they aren't all good and the standards don't require and instructor to see to it.
It would only require a few lines to be added to the standards. Why wouldn't they do it? Why wouldn't they show some squared away looking divers in the course materials? I think it's because they don't know what squared away looking is.
I argued this with PADI concerning their OW course materials. They said students would learn it in AOW but it isn't required there either. Could they make that argument for instructor training or technical training?