playford
Member
short answer I think is im gonna get tucked into the alison noice book for now then see how it goes. 
Contrary to various advice on here I would suggest very few people should skip DS shorebased all together. It is a fourty hour course and that should tell you there is a fair bit of content.
When we get people going directly to YM they end up only covering the basics of the YM and not going into some areas as fully as we like. The reason being that we are having to spend considerable time on topics that should have been learnt at DS.
Likewise students who go straight to DS practical don't get anything like as much out of the course compared with those who have completed the shorebased. Think about it, would you rather be using hours of your practical cours sat at the saloon table being taught tidal curves or would you rather be skippering the boat and developing your practical skills?
The OP who has already completed 75% of the DsSb is of course the exception but most people will only be ripping themselves off by missing out the DS, it is the foundation in nav and seamanship. The massive mistake that a lot of people make is thinking that both shorebased courses are about the content of the exam papers. They are not, there is loads of content beyond the examined subjects.
It may also depend on your background. If you have any experience of maps, and a science or maths background helps, the day skipper and coastal skipper theory are pretty straightforward. It's vector maths and learning rules.
Not everybody who does these courses are degree or even GCSE standard, some have never even completed standard education. So I find it really very patronising when people say say how easy it all is.
I was considering doing the theory courses via distance learning before the practical. I wouldnt skip the day skipper practical, ill be sitting that regardless.
so maybe work through one of the day skipper theory textbooks and exercises and then working through the YM online course via one of the providers (as I would be working at my own speed then?).
I've seen a 5 day, day skipper/coastal skipper combined course as well but that sounds very hard going.
I don't think anyone is trying to be patronising. You said yourself that students are individuals and learn at different rates. The OP asked if he should jump straight to YM theory and some of us said yes, with the right background.
You appear to be saying that simply finding it easy and saying so is patronising those who don't. I don't see how that follows at all - are people not allowed to be good at something in case it upsets others?
How does the "right background" in maths/university, allow anyone who previously has little/no knowledge, learn collision regs/weather/buoyage/safety/seamanship/passage planning/pilotage/etc, quicker than anyone else, so allowing them to jump straight into CS/YM.
For most people, going to university requires an aptitude for learning, so I'd suggest that those who have been are going to be pretty good at picking up the theory. A colleague of mine (an engineer and yes, he'd been to university) attended DS theory for 2 lessons before the instructor suggested he switch to the YM theory classes. He simply picked things up way faster than the average. When I expressed an interest in doing the course, my colleague, knowing my background, suggested I go straight to YM. I phoned the instructor and he agreed.
Some people are fortunate enough to learn quickly, others don't. That's the way the cookie crumbles. I'm c*rp at football but I don't insist everyone else pretend they're c*rp to appease my wounded ambition. To insist that everyone needs 80 hours of tuition to get to YM standard when it is self evident that some don't is absurd.