Which part(s) of the course was MOST valuable to you. Please explain why.
Hands-on.
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Which part(s) of the course was MOST valuable to you. Please explain why.
Hands-on.
Which part(s) of the course was MOST valuable to you. Please explain why.
Scenarios, understanding the roles.
Which part(s) of the course was MOST valuable to you. Please explain why.
The interaction with fellow responders in a training environment. Most of our interactions are in actual day to day calls and not in a training environment where we can learn from each others disciplines.
Which part(s) of the course was MOST valuable to you. Please explain why.
Learn all of the moving parts that go into an active shoot incident.
Which part(s) of the course was MOST valuable to you. Please explain why.
Learning how to support the contact teams from a distant without being a micromanager.
Which part(s) of the course was MOST valuable to you. Please explain why.
The scenarios and command boards.
Which part(s) of the course was MOST valuable to you. Please explain why.
Seeing how all the components of command, and tactical, triage, and transport all worked together.
Which part(s) of the course was MOST valuable to you. Please explain why.
Practical exercises were great. While they were not realistic, they invoked a thought process which will assist in a real world situation.
Which part(s) of the course was MOST valuable to you. Please explain why.
Practical skill stations.
Which part(s) of the course was MOST valuable to you. Please explain why.
Incident command structure above the first LE supervisor level because our local training rarely take place above that level.
*Unedited comments (including typos and spelling) written by students in their course evaluation
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