Diving certification

A Diving certification is a document (usually a wallet sized plastic card) recognizing that an individual authorized to do so, "certifies" that the bearer has completed a course of study as required by agency issuing the card. This is assumed to represent a defined level of ability and knowledge in scuba diving. Divers carry a qualification record or certification card ("C-card") which is required to prove their qualifications when booking a dive trip, hiring scuba equipment or filling diving cylinders. Although recreational certifications are issued by numerous different diver training agencies, the entry-level grade is not always comparable. Different agencies will have different entry-level requirements as well as different higher-level grades, but all are claimed to allow a diver to develop their skills and knowledge in achievable steps.[1][2]

The Diving Certification model originated at Scripps Institution of Oceanography (SIO) in 1952 after two divers died whilst using university-owned equipment[3]. The then President of the University of California Robert Gordon Sproul restricted diving to those who had been trained through the program at SIO and thus "certification" was born. A year later Los Angeles county sent Bev Morgan, Al Tillman, and Ramsey Parks to SIO for diver training[4]. Upon their return, these three then developed the Los Angeles Underwater Instructors Program, the oldest such instructor training program in the U.S., and they used the SIO Diver Certification concept[5].

See also

References

  1. ^ "Open Water Diver". PADI. 2008. http://www.padi.com/scuba/padi-courses/diver-level-courses/view-all-padi-courses/open-water-diver/default.aspx. Retrieved 2009-08-27. 
  2. ^ "Diving Course Syllabus". BSAC. 2009. http://www.bsac.com/page.asp?section=594&sectionTitle=Diving+Course+Syllabus. Retrieved 2009-08-27. 
  3. ^ url=http://sioscuba.ucsd.edu/SIODSM_05.pdf | Scripps Manual for Diving Safety, page 2]
  4. ^ Hanauer, Eric; "Diving Pioneers: An Oral History of Diving in America" ISBN 0-922769-43-5
  5. ^ "Scripps Institution of Oceanography Diver Certification". SIO. 2011. http://sioscuba.ucsd.edu/dive_about.cfm. Retrieved 2011-12-13.