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Brian Nystrom wrote:
Larry C wrote: The only real strong point of the ACA is instruction and safety. Their insurance program allows instructors protection that just isn't available commercially. And if you do have an ACA certified instructor, you have some clue to the level of competence that he has acquired. I would differ with that last statement somewhat, as I've paddled with an ACA "Open water" instructor who is uncomfortable in 2' seas, has no endurance and won't paddle within 50 yards of a rock, except when landing. How this person ever got their rating is beyond me, but I've heard of several similar situations. Brian, go to http://www.acanet.org/instruction/kayak_instruction.lasso and read the syllabi for the various ACA courses. There seem to be many stages of classes, especially in ocean kayak (which is essentially unknown territory for me, represented by all those articles in "Canoe & Kayak" and "Paddler" which I irritably skip). 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. Think of it as the "one-room schoolhouse" model, since, in the scope and scale of society that's kinda what our clubs are. The fourth-graders teach the first-graders to count. The sixth-graders teach the second-graders addition and subtraction. The seventh graders teach multiplication and division, the eighth-graders teach fractions. the 11th-graders teach geometry, and the 12-graders teach algebra. So, perhaps, in the progression of skills and classes set up by the ACA, the specific instructors you have observed are actually acting within the parameters of their certifications, even though they might be highly uncomfortable if asked to exceed those parameters. And always remember that, absent a few idiots who try to make a living by turning a recreational activity into a job, ours is essentially a VOLUNTEER activity and the standards are commensurately... uh, "flexible"? [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 ================================================== ==================== |
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