Professional BoatBuilder - December-January 2018

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88 PROFESSIONAL BOATBUILDER

PARTING
SHOT

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ast winter I drove north to attend an
American Boat & Yacht Council
(ABYC) systems class to update my
marine-surveying continuing educa-
tion (CE) credits. I was hoping to learn
about modern CANbus systems and
components like MOSFETs (metal-
oxide-semiconductor eld-eect transis-
tors), marine sanitary systems like Tecma
or Sealand, new induction stoves, and
maybe the pod drives that had replaced
conventional powerboat transmissions,
propellers, shas, and rudders seemingly
overnight.
Doubts arose about the curriculum
when the “study guide” arrived. It
included as much about CANbus as it
did about a Greyhound bus, and there
was nothing about dripless sha seals,
but pages about bronze ones with wax
seals, which were the latest and greatest
in 1930. Information on pod drives?
Nothing. Curiously, it included much
on how a hand-pumped marine toilet
allows the nastiness to ow one way
thorough the “joker valve,” but not the
other way. More 1930s stu.
At the end of the week came the test,
one of those 1960s ll-in-the-ovals-with-
a-#2-pencil formats, directing us, “Pick
the answer that is the MOST CORRECT.”
I did my best to gure out which subjec-
tive answer to every subjective question
was objectively and factually most cor-
rect. In the end, I was able to pencil in
enough ovals to pass and remain CE
current with my professional association
(NAMS) for another two years.
I spent the trip home contemplating
the whole event while trying to block
out the monetary cost and time away
from work. It was clear that marine test-
ing had fallen way behind the times and
the technologies that now dene our
industry. I thought about positive changes
that could make the required continuing
education relevant and maybe even fun,
and suggest these improvements:


  1. Create new study materials. Elim-
    inate paper altogether, as it increasingly


is in other businesses. Scrap the existing
binder-bound study guide. During my
last class, due to a clerical error, the
40-plus students had at least two versions
of the printed study guide containing
conicting information. is should not
be. With a digitally based system, every-
one’s guide would update with a mouse
click. Also, an instructor standing in
front of a class for a week reading from a
book that was sent to everyone a month
before is a waste of time. As the test is
open-book anyway, an online tutorial
could be studied at home and the test
taken online.


  1. Update the curriculum. In an era
    when tiny AC shore-power ground faults
    are causing fuel sensors on state-of-the-
    art diesel engines to fault out, studying
    mechanical fuel pumps from the 1960s
    makes little sense. Explain why ground
    faults cause mechanical system failure in
    modern boats. Find the newest systems
    aboard new boats, and make them part
    of that year’s curriculum. If training is in
    a classroom, keep it interesting. Use
    videos. Bring demonstrative exhibits.
    e courses should update every year
    with evolving technology. e claim that
    new technology is out of the purview of
    standards training rings hollow and lazy.

  2. Continue to teach the basics. As
    Dave Riin, my electrical consultant and
    retired nuclear submarine captain friend,
    says, “e coursework has to be a blend
    of fundamentals—where are the elec-
    trons going? stu like that—and modern
    application. You have got to spend time
    on the basics to fully understand the new
    stu. So it has to be a blend.”

  3. Have an ongoing webinar-based
    training program. Currently such a pro-
    gram exists for ABYC members but not
    for nonmembers as a means to obtain CE
    credits. Create a library of online tutor-
    ials on wide-ranging subjects that are
    available for rental, purchase, or sub-
    scription—things like specially produced
    or manufacturer-provided videos. Any
    information about a new system is better
    than none. Most of all, the information


must be timely and relevant. is would
be convenient for those who cannot leave
for a week and drive ve states away for a
thousand-dollar class.


  1. Work with manufacturers to pro-
    vide guest speakers or trainers. While
    people such as marine surveyors, marina
    technicians, and USCG personnel can-
    not expect to receive factory service
    training about some proprietary new sys-
    tem, manufacturers may actually want
    industry people to at least have a basic,
    working knowledge of the advantages
    and caveats of any new system. Let’s give
    them the chance.

  2. Get the politics out of training.
    Unfortunately, in the marine-training
    business, there is an unspoken rule to not
    say or do anything to upset a manufac-
    turer: “Don’t bite the hand that feeds
    you.” What good is learning about a stan-
    dard just to be told in the event of a man-
    ufacturer dispute that the standards don’t
    actually mean anything, because, aer
    all, they are only voluntary? Standards
    training should not only drive home
    their content but also the importance of
    adherence to the standards.

  3. Review test results. Aer my class,
    I had no idea which questions I got
    wrong. I would have learned much more
    had the instructor reviewed answers with
    the class. A review would be especially
    relevant to students who didn’t pass the
    test on their rst attempt. If you don’t
    know what you got wrong, how do you
    avoid making the same mistake? Simply
    e-mailing a numerical percentage score
    may get you recertied, but it does little
    to advance training or knowledge.


About the Author: Gregory G. Group is a
NAMS Certified Marine Surveyor in
Cleveland, Ohio. He has surveyed yachts
and small cra on the Great Lakes and
around the world full time since 1980, and
apprenticed with his father in the family
business, Great Lakes Marine Surveyors
Co. Inc., since 1968. A boating enthusiast,
he welcomes comments at greg@great
lakesmarine.com.

Uncertain About Certication


by Gregory G. Group


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