Rating Corner | Using the ISP

Published on Thursday, November 1, 2018

Rating Corner | Using the ISP

by Jim Crouch

Section 4 of the Skydiver’s Information Manual contains the Integrated Student Program, now in its 18th year as the progression that USPA recommends for students working toward the A license. It is a very detailed program, which can make it look intimidating to the casual observer, but it’s actually easy to implement and use. The program makes it simple to track exactly what students have completed and what they still need to accomplish as they work through each of the tasks required for the USPA A license. 

The ISP is really nothing more than an outline that defines each of the USPA A-license requirements. The same requirements existed for decades prior to the ISP, but USPA updated them to include additional training for group freefall and canopy skills. Prior to the ISP, there was no real structure or syllabus for canopy training, except for the basic landing-pattern and landing-accuracy requirements.

With the ISP, all students—whether tandem, IAD, static line or AFF—receive the same training for the A license. Although the first few jumps are different in each discipline, once a student is up to longer freefalls (Category C), the jumps are very similar from the perspective of the student. Freefall is freefall, and the only difference is how the instructor interacts with a student depending on whether the instructor holds an IAD, static-line or AFF rating. Once a student finishes aerobatic maneuvers with an instructor, a USPA Coach takes over the freefall training, helping the student to learn basic group freefall skills. As the student progresses beyond Category C, each of the remaining categories adds emphasis on canopy skills.

Many drop zones provide excellent student programs for those who are pursuing a skydiving license. Unfortunately, there are still others that need improvement. Take an honest look at your student program. There is a good chance you will see it needs some changes. The ISP and the four-sided USPA A-License Progression Card provide a program that has proven to create skilled and knowledgeable A-license holders. It is a flexible program and easy for both students and instructional staff to follow. So why not switch to a well-established program that already has all the supporting forms and documentation in place? It only makes sense.    

Jim Crouch | D-16979
USPA Director of Safety & Training 

Comments (0)Number of views (13692)
Print
 

 

 
Photo by David Cherry

At Skydive Arizona in Eloy, (clockwise from “driver”) Carlo Manuel, Dan Baker, Sam Laliberte and Joel Tremblay perform a car-drop stunt to promote Cleared Hot’s Vet Boogie.

Innhopps

 

Skydive Store

Monday, October 1, 2018

Letters | Oct 01, 2018

Letters

Monday, October 1, 2018

Letters | Oct 01, 2018

Letters

"Sunset Load"
Featured Art | Oct 01, 2018

"Sunset Load"

Think About Your Vote
Gearing Up | Oct 01, 2018

Think About Your Vote

SDEgypt

Skydiving Nationals a Wrap
Industry News | Sep 19, 2018

Skydiving Nationals a Wrap

September 1968
Featured Photos | Sep 13, 2018

September 1968

SDEgypt

One Silent Weekend
Homepage | Sep 11, 2018

One Silent Weekend

Squirrel

First127128129130132134135136Last