Fire Engineering Training Community

Where firefighters come to talk training

I have recently become the JATC Captain for my platoon and am trying to do the right thing to ensure the success of the apprentices.  We have a new set of policies in place and I am attempting to get caught up on all the newbies situations.  As usual there is one particular bad apple that doesn't seem to get it.  No matter what.  With multiple test failures and such.  What is the appropriate course of action I should take?  Please, any and all suggestions will be greatly valued.

Views: 108

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

Eric,
If you could define your terms for us? Is JATC a training position? When you say Platoon, are you referring to a Fire Company?

Other that, the process for dealing with a training problem is the same everywhere. Develop a standard. Train to the standard and if you have people that for what ever reason aren't making the cut off, conduct what ever remedial training is required to get them to the standard. Whether it's physical fitness, understanding the written material or skills drills. If after counseling the person, getting their side of it and telling them what they need to do to progress, continue to give them individual training to get them up to speed. Repeat these steps as you dial the person in. If you continue to have the same problems (if the person continues to perform in an unsafe manner or can't perform physically) start separation paperwork. Maintain a record of all counsel sessions and remedial training plans and how your troop has responded to both.

Let us know if this is what you meant and how it progresses.
Larry
Larry Lasich said:
Eric,
If you could define your terms for us? Is JATC a training position? When you say Platoon, are you referring to a Fire Company?

Other that, the process for dealing with a training problem is the same everywhere. Develop a standard. Train to the standard and if you have people that for what ever reason aren't making the cut off, conduct what ever remedial training is required to get them to the standard. Whether it's physical fitness, understanding the written material or skills drills. If after counseling the person, getting their side of it and telling them what they need to do to progress, continue to give them individual training to get them up to speed. Repeat these steps as you dial the person in. If you continue to have the same problems (if the person continues to perform in an unsafe manner or can't perform physically) start separation paperwork. Maintain a record of all counsel sessions and remedial training plans and how your troop has responded to both.

Let us know if this is what you meant and how it progresses.
Larry

Sorry about that. A Platoon is part of a Battalion, right?

Reply to Discussion

RSS

Policy Page

PLEASE NOTE

The login above DOES NOT provide access to Fire Engineering magazine archives. Please go here for our archives.

CONTRIBUTORS NOTE

Our contributors' posts are not vetted by the Fire Engineering technical board, and reflect the views and opinions of the individual authors. Anyone is welcome to participate.

For vetted content, please go to www.fireengineering.com/issues.

We are excited to have you participate in our discussions and interactive forums. Before you begin posting, please take a moment to read our community policy page.  

Be Alert for Spam
We actively monitor the community for spam, however some does slip through. Please use common sense and caution when clicking links. If you suspect you've been hit by spam, e-mail peter.prochilo@clarionevents.com.

FE Podcasts


Check out the most recent episode and schedule of
UPCOMING PODCASTS

© 2024   Created by fireeng.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service