by Victor
The Open Water Instructor Course forms part of the progression towards qualifying as a BSAC Open Water Instructor (to summarise: IFC + OWIC + TIE + PIE = OWI). The course is not assessed (although in some respects it felt like it was), and costs £69, plus – for this particular course/location – £10 entry at Wraysbury Dive Centre.
The Open Water Instructor Course forms part of the progression towards qualifying as a BSAC Open Water Instructor (to summarise: IFC + OWIC + TIE + PIE = OWI). The course is not assessed (although in some respects it felt like it was), and costs £69, plus – for this particular course/location – £10 entry at Wraysbury Dive Centre.
Around 15 attendees met at 9am at Wraysbury Primary School. Janos Suto
was the boss, and other instructors included Cameron, Ali, Michele and Russell.
Most attendees were from London and SE England, including Sally and me from
Bermondsey BSAC.
The day began with a presentation about the various considerations
instructors need to address when moving from the pool to open water training
(this was a recap of part of the Instructor Foundation Course), and continued
with presentations about organising an open water lesson, where we were
reminded of the many acronyms we learnt during the IFC – STEP, SEEDS, PPP, REAP
etc. We then broke up into 5 groups and were tasked with the job of designing 4
open water lessons (rescue breaths, compass navigation, buoyancy and controlled
buoyant lifts).
The next part of the course involved delivering those open water lessons
at Wraysbury Dive Centre up the road. The place was busy, but we had enough
space to do our lessons unobstructed. Wraysbury has good facilities including a
large car park, kit hire, cafĂ© and compressor. Visibility wasn’t great, but it
was decent enough for what we were doing. The water was cold, which got to some
of us by the time we were delivering the third and fourth lessons.
We later reconvened at Wraysbury Primary School for a useful
presentation about how – for example – a club wreck dive presents many
opportunities to deliver training. It was emphasised that a diver’s dive career
shouldn’t end when they become an instructor. Importantly, it was also
emphasised that BSAC training is what is set out in the Diving Instructor’s Manual,
not what a certain diver in your club might think it is. Janos then provided a
detailed explanation of where the OWIC fits into BSAC instructor training, and
what attendees can move on to – this part of the course probably wasn’t
necessary, as attendees knew all this.
Sally enjoyed today, but I can’t say I did, due to the cold and my
tiredness. I did, however, find the day useful. It is important to attend
courses like this where you have an opportunity to think through your training
thoroughly, get feedback from senior instructors and peers, and crib ideas from
others.
A little more advance information about the day (including an idea of
timings, and a warning that there would be no break for lunch) would have been
useful.
Big thanks to all the volunteer instructor trainers, who gave up a chunk of their weekend for us.
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