Im a line officer with a small rural volunteer dept. Recently it was brought to my attention that some of my guys are getting bored with training. Does anyone have any new training ideas that may catch the attention of my dept?
This maybe off the wall but it gives you some ideas on what you can do to keep your guys attention. Try bing and type in flashover tv. They have a section on training videos that other dept do blah blah blah, I watch it often when i am at work to pass the time by, also it has other videos on the there from on scene an you can have your guys watch them and pick out the do's and don'ts from other dept, good rainy day material.
Can I please have a copy of your jeopardy game also. I think this would be a great way to get my older members fired up again. jpartin98@yahoo.com....Thanks
Here's a couple classes we have done recently. I got my ideas from sites like these.
Members Donn there SCBA where a blackout, (We turn our Hoods Around), put on there gloves and must search the bay floor looking for an assortment of mixed nuts and bolts. Trying to put 1/4" bolts and nuts together with gloves is tough. For more enjoyment I inserted different sizes ,some of which fit nothing they had. Lag bolts work real well although they try there hardiest to screw nuts on them. Now we all have the guys with the cell phones who want to interrupt the class or the ones who want to horseplay. Our rules were talk all you want , make all the noise you want you just aren't allowed to touch the participants. We even had the leaf blowers. The guys really enjoyed the training and all got involved and as the night went on the ones who usually make all the noise were wore out and quite for a change.
We also did a TIC class and did a search and rescue at a local park along the river. I was again able to get the ones who disrupt the class away from the main group by using them as guinea pigs. I just had them go hide and we would find them. We got great hands on with the camera's and had most everyone's attention for the class.
I have a different problem, I have no shortage of training topics / ideas. My problem is how do you get people to understand that training is important, and that even though we are a small town, bad stuff can happen. They all have the adittude that nothing ever happens here, or that it always happens to somebody else. They dont show up for trainings or meetings but at a call they are always the first to question why things were done a certian way or feel things should be done their way. HELP...... I do I get thru to them?
we also have a small department,we set up training for a certain night and then go through with it,the ones that show up then tell the others what we did and then the others show up the next time because they don't want to be left out,after a call we have a debriefing where any topics or concerns can be brought up when the people who didn't show up question anything the I.C. tells them that is the procedure that we train for,hope that helps
Every member should know and understand there rigs and the tools on them. Go back to basic size up, then next month basic eng. ops. hooking into hydrants, estimating lengths needed for stretches. proper hoseline advances. which size hose to use 1 3/4 or 2 1/2. Fog tip or smooth bore. what to do if there is water loss. Go
through these scenarios hands on. test your eng. chaf. knowledge on water loss. drafting,in line pumping, different types of hose lays.
The next month basic truck ops, forcible entry, pri. and sec. searches, wall breeching, portable ladders (each member should be able to est. size ladder needed and with in reason deploy it themselves). Different types of Extinguishers and types of fires used on. All to often you see guys bringing a water can to an electrical incident. Search Rope, Fast Truck ops, Venting Both verticle and horizontal. Overhaul how to do it properly. Test your Lad. chauf. in rig placement and operation
Then 4 times a year have a full scale drill at an undisclosed location put all your training into motion. You will see what you have to work on. Both at FF level and officer level. Critique it when finished.
Ah, that's the problem we all have. We had a fire a month or so ago where two kids died. Many of the guys are asking for training now that something like that happened. I am not saying that's what needs to happen, but I have the same problem myself. In my last department it took a culture change. Our chief and the other officers decided to hold members accountable. That's the key. We set up a schedule for training and told the guys you better get it done or you will not be allowed to respond. The initial problem was the old "but we are just volunteers". I then told them to prove to me that fire burns differently in our town than it does in New York City. None of them could so now I don't hear that comment anymore.
I pulled this exercise prior to out wildland fire season. Good comments by our 12 participants. I dispatched vehicles all over the community, they were to look for a fire site indicated with a stake and flagging. They were to then setup and discharge 20% of water load, call the IC that they had accomplished mission. A water tender was then dispatched to their location and the tender operators refilled the pumper/brush unit. The crews then swapped vehicles. The IC then re-dispatched both to different locations where the same scenario was repeated. Note: The IC needs an assistant and a white board to keep track of the actions!