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- Path: sparky!uunet!munnari.oz.au!spool.mu.edu!howland.reston.ans.net!usc!rpi!news.ans.net!newsgate.watson.ibm.com!yktnews!admin!watson!scifi!njs
- From: njs@scifi.uucp (Nicholas J. Simicich)
- Subject: Re: getting started-selecting instructors
- Message-ID: <1993Jan27.134916.29096@scifi.uucp>
- Organization: Nick Simicich, Peekskill, NY
- References: <1993Jan25.175628.27012@smos.com>
- Date: Wed, 27 Jan 1993 13:49:16 GMT
- Lines: 57
-
- In article <1993Jan25.175628.27012@smos.com> joseph@smos.com (Joseph
- Crunk) writes:
-
- >Concerning the discussion about folks that want to learn how to scuba dive:
- >
- >#Can't sit still on this one.....I agree with Alan. It's more important that
- >#you find a good instructor with whom you feel comfortable. That's the key !!
- >
- >This is good for experienced divers. But what about beginners? My inference
- >being that only an experienced diver is able to assess a *good instructor*.
-
- Someone who does not know about diving can still access whether or not
- they are capable from learning from a particular instructor. They can
- also access the course offerred and determine whether or not it meets
- their needs, and matches their philosophy.
-
- As an example, I've heard people say that they preferred a shorter
- course to a longer one even though they might leave something out. To
- me, this attitude is foreign, and I tend to give a complete course.
- You might ask how much 'work' you will do during the course. Some
- instructors emphasize physical activity.
-
- Finally, you might ask what in-water activities are practiced. At
- least one agency emphasizes forward rolls and so forth, to the
- detriment (in my opinion) of practicing (what everyone else seems to
- consider) ordinary things. But everyone seems to learn to dive, more
- or less. Decide what you want to do.
-
- >I asked this question before on the net and didn't get much of a reply:
- >How does someone that wants to learn to dive determine a *good instructor*?
- >
- >Personally, I place a lot of weight on the instructor's affiliation with
- >a dive store, and that dive store's reputation. If the dive store is in
- >any way questionable, I write-off the instructor as exhibiting poor judgement
- >by being affiliated with that store. Free-lance instructors, on the other
- >hand, are much more difficult to assess, but have a greater potential.
-
- Joe and I might have different ideas of what makes a dive store
- questionable. Certainly, playing fast and loose with equipment, air
- quality, and so forth makes a dive store questionable, but this is an
- area that a student just can't judge, as they probably haven't heard
- anything bad about the dive store, and haven't heard about air quality
- testing, and couldn't look at a compressor and decide if it was safe
- or not.
-
- If you go into the store and get a hard sell, maybe that is something
- to worry about. Do folks just talk diving there, or do they sell
- diving? If they are selling it to you, are you being oversold? In
- the northeast here, if you plan on diving locally, are they oriented
- to sending people on tropical trips? If your main interest is
- tropical diving, are they hooked to a good resort referral network for
- your open water dives?
-
- --
- Nick Simicich - uunet!bywater!scifi!njs - njs@watson.ibm.com
- SSI #AOWI 3958, HSA 318, NAUI #14065
- Join the movement --- turn 'to bush' into a verb.
-