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Oci-One Kanubi Oci-One Kanubi is offline
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Jul 2006
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Default ACA Paddle America Clubs

Could be. My view is fairly parochial, since I have had nothing to do
with any ACA instructors (or any kind of instruction since I took a
couple of NOC clinics in the early '90s) except for our little cadre of
volunteer SW S&R instructors in the DC area.

We were real lucky there. Jeff Davis, the Safety chairman for the
Canoe Cruisers' Ass'n, got himself certified by Charlie as an IT.
Jeff's policy as CCA Safety chair was to present threee two-day classes
each summer, open to CCA members only, and charge only a $15 equipment
fee. For that fee each student got a copy of Charlie Walbridge &
Wayne Sundmacher's book, a prusic loop that he made in class, and two
days of instruction. Further, any student was welcome to return for a
refresher class, absolutely free, if he would act as an assistant and
perform safety overwatch during the in-water units of instruction (this
meant Jeff always had upstream- and downstream-safety without sending
any of the students out of hearing distance).

Well, sometime in the mid-'90s my friend Bob Bonnet and I started to
make a habit of assisting Jeff at all three of his summer classes[1],
and once Jeff became certified as an IT he started using his safety
classes as Development and Certification workshops -- sorta OJT for us
candidate instructors.

After Jeff certified me and Bob as SW S&R Instructors I became safety
chair of the Monocacy Canoe Club, and I decided to leverage Jeff's
cartification: I got the MCC steering committee to agree to sponsor up
to four MCC members each year to the tune of a $25 membership in the
CCA and the $15 equipment fee -- $40 each -- to attend Jeff's classes
enough times to become certified instructors. I kept hinting to Jeff
that he should set up some kind of IT program within his club, the CCA,
but he never did. Nevertheless, as a result of this MCC program, by
2002 or so we had 20 or 25 certified SW S&R instructors in the
Baltimore-Washington area, and the three clubs (CCA, MCC, and Greater
Baltimore CC) were presenting, amongst them, six classes per summer,
each of which could have two or more certified instructors, and some of
which accepted as many as 20 students.

For the MCC safety classes, I arranged to have two instructors, four
assistants (who had been through the class) and up to 16 students.
This meant, for certain exercises where the students waited in line for
their turn to perform a particular evolution -- say, the strainer swim
and the zip-line crossing, we could split the class into two section,
each with an instructor and two safety-boaters, so the students
wouldn't have to wait so long in line. Essentially, we had an 8:1
student:instructor ratio (or better) and an 8:3 student:rescuer ratio
(or better).

[1] Bob and I spent so much time in Jeff's classes because we were just
pushing our way up to Class IV and (in Bob's case -- he was a kayaker)
Class V, without mentors, and driving all up and down the coast probing
for ourselves things like Section IV, the Watauga, and the Bottom
Moose. The thing abour S&R skills -- any skills, for that matter -- is
that if you don't practice, you forget, and by good fortune or good
judgement, we never got realtime practice from serious situations on
the river. So we kept going to Jeff's classes so that we would be
sharp if anything *did* occur.

-Richard, His Kanubic Travesty
--
================================================== ====================
Richard Hopley Winston-Salem, NC, USA
.. rhopley[at]earthlink[dot]net
.. Nothing really matters except Boats, Sex, and Rock'n'Roll
.. rhopley[at]wfubmc[dot]edu
.. OK, OK; computer programming for scientific research also matters
================================================== ====================

Larry C wrote:
I'll have to disagree with this statement. From my experience, the
great majority of ACA certified instructors are "outdoor
professionals", camp counselors, guides, heads of school outdoor
programs, etc. I know that CCC has a very strong volunteer ACA training
program, but outside of that I think you will find that most ACA
instuctors have monetary reasons to maintain the training and the
insurance.

It's surprising how many of the SWR instructor candidates take the
course and never teach.

Larry


Recruiting volunteer instructors is always difficult, and most
certified instructors (at least in the whitewater world) take the
certification for volunteer activities, not to teach for pay[1]. ?Given
that, and given that more certified instructors is good for the sport,
as a whole, it makes sense to certify anyone who has mastered ***the
specific skills (and any prerequisite skills, of course) covered in the
course ***, and demonstrated the ability to actually teach those
skills.



[1] this is a separate beef of mine: that I have to pay ACA an
additional annual fee to retain my Swif****er Safety and Rescue
certification... PAY for the privilege of giving away several perfectly
good weekends to VOLUNTEER to teach something that we all hope every
paddler will learn? ?How twisted is that? ?ACA oughta be giving FREE
memberships to anyone who will take the trouble to become certified
then give up the time to teach safety and rescue.

-Richard, His Kanubic Travesty
--
================================================== ====================
Richard Hopley ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?Winston-Salem, NC, USA
. ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?rhopley[at]earthlink[dot]net
. ? ? Nothing really matters except Boats, Sex, and Rock'n'Roll
. ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? rhopley[at]wfubmc[dot]edu
. OK, OK; computer programming for scientific research also matters
================================================== ====================