Purdu University requires a graduate degree to teach anything including scuba. Obviously the grad degree isn't going to be in diving so I'm not sure that I see the sense in it.
The idea is that with a Grad degree you've likely taught at the university level (as a T.A. at least) and you understand how it all works. Diving can be taught at many levels; including one that places rather rigorous demands on the students' knowledge of physics, anatomy, physiology, oceanography, biology, calculus and statistics.
Ummm 30 years ago my open water class was more complete than many instructor candidate classes are these days. Well, it was 42 years ago, maybe that's why?
But these days I'm an instructor so it has to be better right?????
Has to be right.
Hey, Thal. I'll try. I still have my NASDS Safe Scuba Diver card. That course was the only training available, to me anyway. It was basic, AOW and everything else there was. After that, a person seeking more training had to teach themselves, or learn from others. Today we joke about the fifteen different PADI adventure cards. That is still a lot better than nothing.
A lot of our training was physical-fitness related. Over at the YMCA, my pal Whitey spent more time swimmimg laps than he sat in a classroom, getting instructon. The idea was physical fitness was the key to dive safety. I still kind of agree, but what he got was mostly not scuba instruction.
I don't agree, while better fitness will make for a better diver there's not enough time in a class to actually effect someone's level of conditioning. You can teach them the importance of fitness, and how to improve it, and demonstrate how far out of shape they are, and give them a target to reach, but that's about it.
And... I still have a 1977 Skin Diver magazine where a person writes that "My instructor taught us fifteen ways to die under water, but no ways to have fun". That was my experience, too. My training was not particularly fun, it was rather military-style. Two years ago my daughter finished up the PADI CD and on-line training, and it was a lot more positive.
I'm sure it was more positive, but draconically abbreviated. Neither is a good solution in my view.
The biggest improvement I see is that training is more uniform. Maybe uniformly mediocre, but at least the same all over. I took the NASDS class from an instructor in South Baltimore, and my brother took the same thing from a guy on the other side of town. We shared our notes and found that each of us had learned things that the other hadn't.
Why is it better to have everything reduced to the least common denominator? As Emerson noted, "A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds."
So, are there divers being certified today that would fail the training I took? You bet. We were all young and swam a lot, anyway. In that regard, maybe the old timey certification is better, if harder = better. However, the content of course materials and the number of subjects available are superior today.
Thanks for asking, and Merry Christmas.
I would not see failing your earlier course as a measure of anything at all. It would be a prime example of the basic tenet of instruction, "Just because you think that you've taught does not mean that they have learned."
... Anyhow, NASDS started training using Betamax VCR tapes, and me and some friends were among the first to take it. There were about a dozen tapes. Nobody could afford a VCR at home, so we watched them in the store. The system allowed the instructor to work the store while we trained. This was at the old Scuba Hut in Glen Burnie.
Well, sometimes during the tapes the instructor would pipe up "don't listen to this part... it is wrong", or "don't do it that way". The concept was obviously not perfected. Chaz trained my brother in Parkville, and he got better teaching without tapes.
Stu S.
Now I understand your comment, the training that you had 30 years ago (NASDS) was hardly the norm, in fact it was widely disparaged by the majority of instructors; especially the tapes, which were awful. With all due respect for both your right to have an opinion, and for the experience that you went through, I must respectful submit that perhaps you might rethink your generalizations as to what diving instruction was like 30 years ago, or how it compares to diving instruction that is being currently offered. There are more than a few folks who were there at time that participate in the SCUBABOARD.
Merry Christmas and I wish you the best possible New Year.