Diving skills can be grouped by skills relating to the mode of diving – freediving, scuba, surface supplied or saturation diving – and whether the skill is a standard skill used in everyday diving, an emergency skill to keep oneself alive when something goes wrong, or a rescue skill to be used in the attempt to assist another diver in difficulty.
Scuba skills Scuba skills are the skills required to dive safely using
self-contained underwater breathing apparatus, (scuba). Most of these skills are relevant to both open circuit and
rebreather scuba, and many are also relevant to
surface-supplied diving. Those skills which are critical to the safety of the diver may require more practice than is usually provided during training to achieve reliable long-term proficiency Some of the skills are generally accepted by recreational
diver certification agencies as necessary for any
scuba diver to be considered competent to dive without direct supervision, and others are more advanced, though some
diver certification and accreditation organizations may consider some of these to also be essential for minimum acceptable entry level competence. Divers are instructed and assessed on these skills during basic and advanced training, and are expected to remain competent at their level of certification, either by practice or refresher courses. The skills include selection, functional testing, preparation and transport of scuba equipment, dive planning, preparation for a dive, kitting up for the dive, water entry, descent, breathing underwater, monitoring the dive profile (depth, time and decompression status), personal breathing gas management, situational awareness, communicating with the dive team, buoyancy and trim control, mobility in the water, ascent, emergency and rescue procedures, exit from the water, unkitting after the dive, cleaning and preparation of equipment for storage and recording the dive, within the scope of the diver's certification. Some of these skills affect the diver's ability to minimise adverse environmental impact.
Surface-supplied diving skills Surface supplied diving skills are the skills and procedures required for the safe operation and use of surface-supplied
diving equipment. Besides these skills, which may be categorised as standard operating procedures, emergency procedures and rescue procedures, there are the actual working skills required to do the job, and the procedures for safe operation of the work equipment other than diving equipment that may be needed. Some of the skills are common to all types of surface-supplied equipment and deployment modes, others are specific to the type of bell or stage used, or to
saturation diving. There are other skills required of divers which apply to the surface support function, which are necessary as the diver is also expected to work in a support capacity as a member of the
diving team. Standard diving skills include skills like buoyancy control, finning, mask clearing, pre-dive checks and diver communications. They are used all the time, and are seldom lost due to lack of practice. Usually the diver gets better at these skills over time due to frequent repetition. Emergency skills should seldom be needed, and may not be practiced often after training, but when an emergency occurs, the ability to perform the skill adequately, if not necessarily flawlessly, may be critical to the diver's health or survival. Rescue skills are more relevant to keeping a co-worker alive than oneself. If lucky, a diver may never need to attempt the rescue of another, and these skills also need periodical scheduled repetition to retain competence. First aid skills are a similar category, and are generally re-assessed periodically to remain in date. It is generally considered a responsibility of the employer to ensure that their employees get sufficient practice in emergency and rescue skills.
Training dives Practical training for diving skills is provided during one or more training dives. In most cases the skill is demonstrated and initially practiced in
confined water until the diver is sufficiently adept that it is acceptably safe to practice the skill in more realistic open water conditions, closer to the conditions they can reasonably expect during unsupervised dives, after which the skill will be assessed in open water if it is critical to diver safety. The diving school and instructor have a clear duty of care to the student diver during in-water training, and this is often stipulated in diving legislation, and where there is no legislation, in the training standards and protocols of the certification agencies. All training agencies recognised by the
World Recreational Scuba Training Council and
European Underwater Federation publish minimum standards for safety during training dives, which are supposed to be enforced. Confined water venues for skills training and practice are generally swimming pools or tanks, but may be parts of an open water venue secured and marked for the purpose, provided that the conditions are assessed as suitable. Training standards generally stipulate the ratio of learners to instructional staff, and may require additional safety personnel on site or on call. Special requirements may be stipulated for specific exercises, such as emergency ascent training. A minimum duration may be specified for training dives, as may be a minimum number of training dives, and the number of times each skill is practiced.
Training methods for diving skills Diving skills are practical skills, suitable for
learning by performing and improvement by correct repetition and overlearning. Many of the diving skills are safety-critical – incorrect performance can put the diver or another person at risk, and in some cases incorrect response can be rapidly fatal. The skill is generally discussed, demonstrated by a skilled practitioner, and then attempted by the learner in controlled conditions. Repetition with feedback from the instructor is generally continued until the skill can be performed reliably under normal conditions. Once mastered, the critical skills may be combined with related activities and practiced until they become second nature. Professional, particularly military training, may
overtrain skills until they are internalised to the extent of being conditioned reflexes, requiring very little conscious thought, as adequate performance under highly stressed and task loaded conditions may be necessary for survival. Situations can develop during dives where external stress can distract the diver and hinder prompt and appropriate response. This can put the diver at immediate risk.
Stress exposure training, which includes exercise of important existing skills in a stressful and distracting environment to develop the ability to perform them reliably in spite of the circumstances, can be used to prepare divers to function effectively under high-stress conditions. This is done after the diver has mastered the skills in a benign environment under conditions conducive to learning and retention of the skills. This form of training is generally not used in recreational diver training, and is more likely to be encountered in military and other professional diving, and occasionally in technical diver training. It is not usually required by the training standards.
Continued education and spaced repetition Learning systems that rely on short term cramming and minimum repetition tend to be effective at getting knowledge and skills to a sufficient level that the learner can be pronounced competent against the standard, but this knowledge and skill set is generally lost relatively quickly unless repeated at intervals. When competence is marginal to begin with, and skills are not practiced for several months, they may not be available in an emergency. Two methods for improving knowledge and skill retention are
continued education, building on the existing skills and repeating them where necessary, and
spaced repetition, The periodical practice of existing skills often enough that they are not degraded, on the "use it or lose it" principle.
Training venues for diving skills Initial skills training is restricted to
confined water, a diving environment that is enclosed and bounded sufficiently for safe training purposes. This generally implies that conditions are not affected by geographic or weather conditions, and that divers can not get lost.
Swimming pools and
diver training tanks are included in this category. A diver training tank is a container of water large and deep enough to practice diving and underwater work skills, usually with a window through which the exercises can be viewed by the instructor. Once competence has been demonstrated in confined water, repetition of skills in
open water is usual. This is generally done in combinations that simulate realistic circumstances when reasonably practicable. == First aid skills ==