Learning to dive isn’t difficult, but
like any activity worth doing, it
requires some time and effort.
While
taking the
PADI Open Water Diver course,
you’ll enjoy three phases: Knowledge
Development, Confined Water Dives and
Open Water Dives
Learn to Dive. Anytime.
Anywhere.
The PADI Open Water Diver course is
incredibly flexible and performance
based, which means that your PADI
Dive Centre or Resort can offer the
program on a wide variety of schedules,
and paced according to how fast you
progress.
It’s possible to complete your
confined and open water dives in as few
as three or four days (provided you take
care of reading the manual and watching
the video ahead of time).
However, many
people prefer a more leisurely schedule.
Contact your
local PADI Dive
Centre or Resort
to find out the schedules or ask about a
private or semiprivate course.
1.
Knowledge Development – This
develops your familiarity with basic
principles a
nd procedures. You learn
things like how pressure affects your
body, how to choose the best gear and
what to consider when planning dives.
You complete Knowledge Development on
your own, reading each of five sections
of the PADI Open Water Diver Manual
and watching the corresponding section
of the PADI Open Water Diver Video
(which also previews skills you’ll
learn).
If you like learning with a
personal computer, you can also get the
Open Water Diver Manual and Video together as a CD-ROM. You
briefly review what you studied in each
section with your instructor and take a
short quiz to be sure you’re getting it.
At the end of the course, you take an
exam that makes sure you’ve got all the
key concepts and ideas down.
2.
Confined Water Dives – This is
what it’s all about – diving. You
develop basi
c scuba skills in a pool or
in a body of water with pool-like
conditions.
Here you’ll learn everything
from setting up your gear to how to
easily get water out of your mask
without surfacing.
You’ll also practice
some emergency skills, like sharing air
– just in case.
Plus, you may play some
games, make new friends and have a great
time.
There are five confined water dives,
with each building upon the previous.
Over the course of these five dives, you
attain the skills you need to dive in
open water.

3.
Open Water Dives – After your
confined water dives, you and the new
friends you’ve made continue learning
during four open water dives with your
PADI Instructor at a dive site.
This is
where you have fun putting it all
together and fully experience the
underwater adventure – at the beginner
level, of course.
You may make these
dives near where you live or at a more
exotic destination on holiday.