British Association of Snowsport Instructors

For sugar cane wine, see Basi.


The British Association of Snowsport Instructors (BASI) is the certification organisation of professional snowsport instructors in the UK.

History

As BAPSI (British Association of Professional Ski Instructors), BASI was founded in 1963 before changing its name to BASI in 1967 to more fully reflect its membership profile. In 1964 it was invited to join the International Ski Instructors Association. In 1985 it took over the training of Nordic Ski Instructors in the UK from the Association of Nordic Instructors (ANSI).

It has grown to over 6000 members who work around the world. Initially BASI's courses were mostly held in Scotland, later moving to Tignes and eventually to Zermatt in Switzerland. BASI now runs courses in many locations worldwide including New Zealand, Argentina and the United States.

Qualifications

BASI offers qualifications in alpine skiing, snowboarding, telemark, nordic skiing and adaptive skiing. Like most snowsport certification organisations worldwide, it offers different levels of certification based on the instructors qualification progress. For example, in alpine skiing it offers four levels, namely:

There are similar certification levels across snowboarding, telemark, nordic skiing and adaptive skiing.

The Alpine and Snowboard Level 1 can be extended to a "Senior Instructor UK" qualification via a shortened version of the mountain environment Level 2 course. The Senior Instructor qualification is targeted at those who only intend to work on artificial slopes.

BASI also provide their own set of alpine ski racing coach qualifications, known as the Alpine Development Coach Level 1, 2, 3 and 4.

External links

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