So
you are ready to dive into the silent world. There are some things
you need to consider before making the plunge. First and for most
is the decision of which dive agency to train with in order to receive
your C-card (certification card). You will need to scout around
your area to see what organizations are available. This may be a
limited selection depending on your area. Keep in mind that some
agencies will train a diver in a weekend. So taking a weekend trip
to a neighboring town might be a consideration.
Some basic
facts: All certification agencies in the United States meet the
same minimum standard for entry-level scuba instruction. All basic
open-water courses must include the same syllabus of diving skills,
physics, physiology, etc., must have classroom or home study instruction,
must require pool or confined water instruction, and must require
the completion of at least four open-water dives. The standards
also specify age, water skills and health minimums for all students.
Companion standards regulate the training and performance of instructors.
For these
minimum standards we can thank, believe it or not, the government
and lawyers. Fear of ham-fisted regulation as well as the "sharks
that swim on land" has forced the certification agencies to school
around an industry standard, called ANSI Z-86.3 (soon to be revised
and reissued as Z-375.1). It was written by the Recreational Scuba
Training Council (RSTC), whose members are IDEA, NASDS, PADI,
PDIC, SSI and YMCA. The standard is blessed by the American National
Standards Institute (ANSI), a nonprofit organization that certifies
an industry standard has been arrived at through open discussion
and with due process. Although only six agencies are members of
RSTC, as a practical matter all have to meet the RSTC/ANSI standard
in order to buy liability insurance and defend themselves from
lawsuits.
Some agencies
(IDEA, NASDS and YMCA) require a minimum number of hours of instruction,
typically 24. NAUI has no classroom minimum, but requires 17 hours
of "practical application," including 10 hours in the water (pool
and open water). PDIC requires six lectures and six pool sessions
Other agencies
require that students meet performance standards, and leave the
number of lecture hours and pool sessions up to the instructor.
This flexibility allows small classes to finish the course requirements
quickly and makes it possible for courses to be compressed into
weekends. It also makes it easier for instructors to rush students,
some of whom may be shy about admitting when they don't understand.
That's not the agency's goal, of course, but it happens.
Another indication
of whether your agency has stiffer training minimums is the number
of open-water scuba dives it requires for certification. The RSTC
minimum is four: NAUI, PDIC and YMCA require four scuba and one
skin dive. SSI recommends one skin, but requires five scuba dives.
NASE requires four scuba and recommends one skin dive; it says
it will make the skin dive a requirement next year. IDEA requires
four for its "Basic Open Water" certification, but encourages
its students to go for its "Open Water" certification requiring
six. IANTD requires 90 minutes of bottom time to be performed
in four to six scuba dives. The others require at least four,
but may recommend more. Obviously, these ceilings are not far
above the floor.
Of course,
individual instructors can exceed an agency's minimum standards,
and many do. The bottom line: Your best chance of getting the
best instruction is not to worry about the agency but to find
the best instructor for you.
At first
glance, there's no reason to expect one agency to have better
instructors than another. All instructors must meet certain RSTC/ANSI
minimum standards in age, health and diving experience, and agencies
must meet minimums in training them. But here, too, minimums have
a way of becoming maximums. Besides, good instructors must have
not only diving experience but the gifts of communication, leadership
and empathy--gifts of nature as much as of education. All the
training in the world will not make some scuba instructors good
teachers; others are "naturals." Where agencies can play an important
role is in quality assurance--making sure instructors teach up
to standard and weeding out those who don't.
All the agencies
we contacted have a formal grievance procedure, which means if
a complaint about an instructor reaches them, they will investigate.
That's something, but begs the question: How rigorous are the
investigations? What are the ground rules for canceling the instructor's
certification to teach?
Most agencies
(IANTD, IDEA, NASDS, NASE, NAUI, PADI, PDIC, WASI and YMCA) go
a step further and survey some or all students who are issued
C-cards. NASE requires instructors to turn in critique forms completed
anonymously by all students. PDIC sends a postage-paid questionnaire
to all students; NASDS and NAUI include one in all copies of their
basic scuba textbook. Typically, after naming the instructor,
the student is asked whether training standards were met and is
invited to add an overall evaluation and written comments.
No, when
it comes to training standards, it doesn't matter significantly
which agency issues your entry-level C-card unless you plan to
push the envelope of exotic dive travel. Even then, the problem
is easily solvable. What does matter, a lot, is that you find
a good instructor, one with lots of experience, patience and empathy.
Feel a bit
overwhelmed? Check out the Scuba Diving
Organization Comparison Table.
The above
information was obtained from "Training
agencies, who's the best?"at www.newdiver.com.