Course that certifies students to conduct recreational scuba dives within agency depth limits (typically 18 m / 60 ft). Covers safety procedures, underwater navigation, and proper use of scuba equipment.
Objectives:
- Teach basic scuba diving principles and underwater safety.
- Enable students to plan and perform buddy recreational dives.
- Develop practical skills: buoyancy control, equalization, air management, and emergency procedures.
Course content:
- Theory: diving physics and physiology, hazards and prevention, equipment, dive planning, hand signals, and basic regulations.
- Confined-water training: gear assembly, entries/exits, breathing underwater, equalization, buoyancy exercises, and emergency skills.
- Open-water dives: usually 4 supervised dives to practice skills, basic navigation, and buddy communication.
Methodology:
Classroom or e-learning theory, confined-water practice (pool), and supervised open-water dives (ocean, lake, or quarry) with continuous practical assessment.
Prerequisites:
- Minimum age per agency (commonly 10–12 for junior, 15 for full certification).
- Basic swimming ability and reasonable physical fitness; medical clearance recommended or required.
- Valid ID.
Certification:
International certification from the chosen agency (e.g., PADI, SSI, NAUI, CMAS) upon completion of theory, confined-water skills, and required open-water dives. Allows buddy diving to the certification depth limit.
Basic equipment (provided or rented):
Mask, snorkel, fins, BCD, regulator, tank, pressure gauge; wetsuit as needed.