PADI Specialty Instructor Courses
Prerequisites:
PADI Assistant Instructor or Open Water Scuba Instructor(some courses require student level in addition ex.EANX, Rebreather, Cavern)
As a PADI Specialty Instructor
You're on your way to becoming a Master Scuba Diver Trainer with only five Specialty Instructor ratings
You challenge your students to become Master Scuba Divers
You increase your marketability as a PADI Professional
Thee are three ways to become a Specialty Instructor – with a Course Director, use your experience to apply directly to PADI or write your own outline.
You can teach courses that interest you!
You can offer more, do more
Do your Specialty Instructor Courses with Mark and get teaching specialties as soon as possible.
Also take the MSDT Prep package of 5 spec instructor courses with Mark andtake advantage of the offer to come back on any subsequesnt specialty instructor course run by Mark and receive the training for free!!!!!!!*
*Excluding materials and fees to PADI
Why would you want to be a specialty instructor?
PADI Course Director Mark Slingo explains in an article for Scuba Jedi:
‘Ok guys. Congratulations on becoming PADI Instructors. Give yourself a standing ovation. You have done exceptionally well to get to this level. Now you can give people a life changing experience as you introduce them and guide them through the world of scuba diving. Get out there and start teaching as much as you can. But what other options are also available to you now? Is this the end of the road? Does you experience stop after the IE? No way!
Don’t let this be the end of your diving education. There are still more things that you can learn and also more things that you can offer people as a diving educator.
For instance have you ever thought about being able to teach the things that interest you? Do you have a particular passion for wreck diving or perhaps underwater photography? Would you like to be able to teach other divers these things so they can join you in your interests? Maybe you just want to be able to teach something that you have real enthusiasm for or something particular to your local environment.
It also means that there is less repetition for you. Let’s face it teaching the same courses day-in-day-out might become a little tedious so the ability to be able to go and teach something else once in a while can provide a nice break plus adding different teaching experiences for you. Either way you might want to think about becoming a PADI Specialty Instructor.
Look at all the options that are available to you. There are over 25 PADI Specialties and that is not including the Distinctive specialties written by instructors that apply to interests of theirs. There is so much more that you can offer your students and your potential dive centre employers.
This is also not something to be sniffed at. If you can teach more then you can offer a potential employer more value as they can obviously utilize you more. The more things you can add to your ‘Instructors Quiver’ then the more valuable you can be to a dive operation. It can also help you to move up the PADI Instructor ladder to Master Scuba Diver Trainer and beyond.
These ratings past the Open Water Scuba Instructor rating denote instructors with a lot of experience and thus give you a large amount of credibility. Once you move onto ratings such as IDC Staff Instructor as well you are starting to help in the PADI Instructor Development process assisting Course Directors in shaping the future diving instructors. Wouldn’t you like to be a part of this process in changing people from divers into guys who can teach diving? Be a part of that life changing experience for someone else. Continue your diving education and this is certainly possible plus it again makes you even more useful within the dive industry.
My own experience as a Staff Instructor took me to a whole new perception in the way I looked at teaching diving and the way that I could work with people. This was pretty much the best transition I made in diving and only encouraged me to go further up the ladder to Course Director.
This might all; be quite a lot to take in just following your gradation from the IDC/ IE which obviously was such a great achievement in itself. But why not build on what you have learned and thus make yourself a more rounded dive professional. Going through the Continuing Education process will also allow you to carry on working with experienced instructors and seeing their methods of teaching which will allow you to build your own style by working with and observing many others. Even now I still learn from watching other diving instructors at work as no one has completely the same way of teaching and working with people.
This is not to say just focus on your con-ed but still get on with teaching the ‘bread and butter’ PADI courses. Just recognize what con-ed can offer you and what you can use it for. Teach those things that really interest you and your enthusiasm for your subject can rub off on your students. There are also little things like teaching certain Specialties can enhance you knowledge to make teaching other courses better such as the PADI Divemaster course.
The point that I am trying to make is that you shouldn’t just think that now you have passed your IE that that is the end of your education. There is so much more that you can learn and so much more that you can offer in the dive industry both to the benefit of your students, and yourself. The PADI system offers so much more for you as an instructor and you should take the opportunity to use it to its full potential and realize your full potential’ |