Keen_Ed
Well-Known Member
... A couple of interesting stories ...
Is there a way that the RYA gathers feedback on examiners? A bit of 360 degree reviewing...
... A couple of interesting stories ...
I just met a bloke who has passed his yacht masters theory and didn't put pen to paper.
He is now and has been for a few years a charter boat skipper!
He does delivery and olther jobs, its people like this who know people that make you ask if its worth the bother.
Is there a way that the RYA gathers feedback on examiners? A bit of 360 degree reviewing...
How can the instructing school pass anyone for a YMO ticket?
The examiner is external & should be independant!
Not possible, the exam for theory includes asessments for chartwork, weather and rule of the road. Written down, its not an interview!
He is being economical.![]()
you don't have to pass YM theory to pass your YM, so it is sort of possible but not as described.
if you haven't expect the examiner to delve deeper on theory subjects though.
The first RYA exam I ever did was YM practical.
The poster says the person passed his theory without putting pen to paper. Wires crossed I reckon.
Not possible, the exam for theory includes asessments for chartwork, weather and rule of the road. Written down, its not an interview!
He is being economical.![]()
As indicated before, I'm not a member of the elite cadre of YM Examiners, so I have no 'personal or prejudicial interest'. I am aware that all of 'em I've met are deeply experienced, personally competent, and quite individualistic. It is natural that emphasis will vary, and it is also reasonable that the RYA, as proxy for the MCA, will seek to 'standardise' as much as is reasonable. This is done through Examiners' Assessments and, I believe, Bulletins and Conferences. I'm aware that certain Examiners have their prejudices. Persuading them to alter their ways is an uphill struggle....
There are strengths and there are weaknesses in the approach of every assessor or examiner, in every walk of life. 'Standardisation' or 'validation' keeps a lot of training specialists in issues to wrangle about. Here are a couple of examples, from my own observations:
One bright and enthusiastic young professional, with whom I'd sailed several times, invested time and money in evening classes in London, then in a Day Skipper 1-week's course with a sea school on the Solent. Came the assessments, and the 'by numbers' examiner with a Joint Services' background and a Pirbright parade square attitude. My young friend was asked to plan end execute a night passage between two ports in the Solent. I've seen the plan - it was detailed, accurate, and fine. He was asked at one point in the night passage if he thought he could safely pass ahead of a ferry or merchant vessel, and he declined, passing instead safely behind. He was sneered at.... Some of the seamark lights he couldn't identify with certainty. He was 'failed'.
The debrief was, apparently, scathing. For a Day Skipper certificate of competence.....
Another friend, with whom I've sailed several thousand miles over several years, has a 37' catamaran which he had Coded and chartered out via a prominent Plymouth agent. He's competent, he's meticulous, and he's keen as mustard. During a YM exam, he was asked to short-tack his cat, at night and in the rain, up through the moorings in the Cattewater off Mountbatten. The wind was gusting hard, swirling down off and between the hangers, with violent changes of direction. He declined, and sailed the boat, with several tacks, up clear of the lines of unlit moored boats. One of his enduring problems is that he stammers - badly. He's not uncertain - he just has communication challenges, and those who sail with him learn to accommodate that. The examiner made much of this ''inadequacy' in the debrief, when he 'failed' him. I know my stuff ( on most days ) and he is one of the most reliable and aware skippers I've sailed with in recent years.
Yes, there may have been more to it on both occasions. No, I don't think the National Training Scheme was shown in the best light and, no, neither of them ever put their hands in their pockets for the RYA again.![]()
I just met a bloke who has passed his yacht masters theory and didn't put pen to paper.
He is now and has been for a few years a charter boat skipper!
He does delivery and olther jobs, its people like this who know people that make you ask if its worth the bother.
Why was I mildly surprised to note there's a Wikipedia entry for this.....?
Of course, it must be right, accurate, and bang up to date.....
I'm not part of the structure, but I'm aware of the Yachtmaster Qualifications Panel. They set the standards. Having met a couple of 'em over the years, I'm aware these bods are no fools.
There is constant pressure, some of it commercial, to water down the standards. Who would benefit from that? Changes to requirements do occur - I'm glad I no longer need to do Morse Code or draw my own synoptic charts from a scribbled-down Shipping Forecast with CSRs - but surely the direction should be towards raising the bar....? And surely would-be holders of such certificates should have an interest in higher standards.
So, forumeers, what higher standards would you think appropriate to today's seas? A simulator checkride of ColRegs Practical Interpretation? An Emergency Repairs and Maintenance Module? Questions and Answers Test on Basic Law of the Sea?
What knowledge and demonstrable skills should you expect of a modern Yachtmaster Offshore?![]()
You sure it was a DS course, 'cos there is no 'examiner' for these, the candidate is assessed by the instructor & as such would not have embarrased him regarding any weaknesses. he would have been sensibly debriefed.
Why was I mildly surprised to note there's a Wikipedia entry for this.....?
Of course, it must be right, accurate, and bang up to date.....
I'm not part of the structure, but I'm aware of the Yachtmaster Qualifications Panel. They set the standards. Having met a couple of 'em over the years, I'm aware these bods are no fools.
There is constant pressure, some of it commercial, to water down the standards. Who would benefit from that? Changes to requirements do occur - I'm glad I no longer need to do Morse Code or draw my own synoptic charts from a scribbled-down Shipping Forecast with CSRs - but surely the direction should be towards raising the bar....? And surely would-be holders of such certificates should have an interest in higher standards.
So, forumeers, what higher standards would you think appropriate to today's seas? A simulator checkride of ColRegs Practical Interpretation? An Emergency Repairs and Maintenance Module? Questions and Answers Test on Basic Law of the Sea?
What knowledge and demonstrable skills should you expect of a modern Yachtmaster Offshore?![]()
What knowledge and demonstrable skills should you expect of a modern Yachtmaster Offshore?![]()
When originally introduced as a Board of Trade qualification in the sixxties (the RYA had nothing to do with it at that time) I ran an evening class at Maidstone. The syllabus was extraordinary: knowledge of magnetism nearly up to compass adjuster level, and no practical exam whatsoever. I gave it up. It was a farce.