
This is live facilitated training presented through Zoom.
Course Duration: 3 hours.
Includes live chat and live Q&A.
Includes a 7-day recorded playback for anyone who could not attend live.
Course Description
When first responders do seemingly insane things at emergency scenes there is never a shortage of peers waiting to pass judgment and to criticize. It is very easy to be the judge and jury of flawed performance after the fact. However, no amount of judgment will result in learning from the mistakes.
This program will offer an eye-opening view into how responders are being trained to fail, why those who are training them don’t know they’re doing it and how to fix the problem.
Part 1 of the program shares powerful lessons on how our brains learn and remember, including:
- Two memory systems used in learning
- The role of repetition during the initial phases of learning
- Memory rehearsal in long-term memory formation and recall
- The use of routines
- How memory prompts can aid learning and recall
- Three neurotransmitters that aid memory formation and recall
- Emotions
- The role of subconscious memory and your “magic knowledge”
- How habits serve as assets and liabilities
- The importance of visual learning and the role of mirror neurons
- The brain’s struggle to separate fact from vividly imagined fiction
Part 2 shares specific examples of how police, fire and EMS responders are being trained to fail and provides solutions for correcting the problems.
About the presenter
Richard B. Gasaway, PhD, CSP is widely considered a trusted authority on human factors, situational awareness and the high-risk decision making processes used in high-stress, high consequence work environments. He served 33 years on the front lines as a firefighter, EMT-Paramedic, company officer, training officer, fire chief and emergency incident commander. His doctoral research included the study of cognitive neuroscience to understand how human factors flaw situational awareness and impact high-risk decision making.