Advanced Law Enforcement Rapid Response Training (ALERRT)的封面图片
Advanced Law Enforcement Rapid Response Training (ALERRT)

Advanced Law Enforcement Rapid Response Training (ALERRT)

公共安全

San Marcos,Texas 15,228 位关注者

Research based integrated training.

关于我们

The Advanced Law Enforcement Rapid Response Training (ALERRT) Center at Texas State University was created in 2002 as a partnership between Texas State University, the San Marcos, Texas Police Department and the Hays County, Texas Sheriff’s Office to address the need for active shooter response training for first responders.

网站
https://alerrt.org
所属行业
公共安全
规模
51-200 人
总部
San Marcos,Texas
类型
教育机构
创立
2002
领域
research、training、integrated response、law enforcement、fire、ems、stop the bleed和Active Shooter Training

地点

  • 主要

    1251 Sadler Drive

    Suite 1200

    US,Texas,San Marcos,78666

    获取路线
  • 1285 William Pettus Rd

    US,Texas,Maxwell,78656

    获取路线

Advanced Law Enforcement Rapid Response Training (ALERRT)员工

动态

  • ****BREAK BREAK BREAK**** Level 1 Train the Trainer Course seats available Location: Amarillo, TX Dates: March 24-28, 2025 POC: Eric Wallace [email protected] You can sign up by contacting the POC or using the registration link: https://lnkd.in/gNBBQTNh As a reminder, ALERRT courses are grant funded and free to students.

  • Police conduct an ERASE T3 in Frisco Texas This course is designed to prepare first responders for an open-air active shooter encounter. It addresses a wide range of tactics and techniques when addressing an exterior armed aggressor. This hands on course will cover equipment selection, vehicle ambushes, medical emergencies, vehicle and dismounted officer/citizen down rescue, individual/ team movement techniques, and emergency vehicle crisis response. Some participants attending this course have found it to be physically challenging. Officers attending this course should be able to walk moderate distances, jog, kneel, crawl, and lift moderate weight. This is an outside class and is routinely conducted during inclement weather conditions Find or request an ERASE course at www.alerrt.org

    • 该图片无替代文字
    • 该图片无替代文字
    • 该图片无替代文字
    • 该图片无替代文字
    • 该图片无替代文字
      +2
  • One of the key issues in developing training from an EcoD approach is that you must identify the things that don’t change (called invariants in the EcoD jargon). For shooting, the key invariant is barrel alignment. If the barrel is correctly aligned at the moment the trigger breaks and the gun fires, the bullet will strike the target. So what’s the problem? If your goal is target shooting, there isn’t one. Target shooting allows the shooter to stand the same way and work the pistol in the same way every time. The training at most ranges works very well for this type of shooting. Just watch a professional shooting contest—the shooters make it look effortless, like they’re machines! The high-friction grip, squared stance, arms fully extended, elbows and wrists locked, pistol directly aligned with the dominant eye way of shooting appears to be the most efficient way to shoot a pistol at range targets. How do we bridge the gap? Improve shot feedback, amplify barrel alignment information, change shooting positions are a few possible suggestions. Read more about it at the Tactical Science Substack: https://lnkd.in/g4QNe7SU

    • 该图片无替代文字
  • Advanced Law Enforcement Rapid Response Training (ALERRT)转发了

    Massachusetts has adopted #NFPA3000 as our statewide framework for integrated Active Shooter / Hostile Event Response training. In partnership with the Executive Office of Public Safety and Security, Massachusetts Municipal Police Training Committee, and the Advanced Law Enforcement Rapid Response Training (ALERRT) Center, DFS trained nearly 2,700 public safety personnel to #StopTheKilling and #StopTheDying last year -- including law enforcement and fire/rescue instructors who are now certified to deliver that training themselves.

    • ASHER Training year in review
  • This is the first of our series on Human Performance. Each month, we will be posting a topic related to the human factor in law enforcement, the man behind the machine. Today’s topic highlights the effects of training on physiological stress reactions during lethal force scenarios: The management of physiological stress plays a large role in the ability for Police Officers to safely perform their duties. This becomes more apparent during split-second life or death situations in which deficits in performance can have tragic consequences. A study conducted in 2022 found that among 122 active-duty police officers, elevated stress reactions were key predictors for substandard performance and increased lethal force errors. The largest predictor of improved performance was the officer’s level of training, while years of service showed a decrease in performance. The authors of this study opine that this result may be due to experienced patrol officers maintaining minimum qualifications and sustainment training without seeking out advanced training or practice. While it is well known that experience does provide the ability to perceive subtle irregularities a novice might miss, if it is not coupled with adequate training, the stress reactions during these events may lead to a decoupling of the affordances granted by experience. Read the full article here: https://lnkd.in/gwniExN4

    • 该图片无替代文字
  • “But firearms are different!” That’s the argument most often presented when introducing Ecological Dynamics to police trainers. And they’re right—firearms are different. Deadly weapons. Unparalleled responsibility. Life-or-death stakes. Yet, does that mean we should cling to outdated methods? Or does it demand better training rooted in science? We have to respect the unique risks that firearms pose during training, but the principles of EcoD still hold true. EcoD is a general theory about how people learn skills. If you buy into its core idea—that learners are naturally good at organizing around the opportunities in their environment to achieve goals—then the job of a trainer is to figure out how to apply those principles safely to firearms training. ALERRT Executive Director Dr. Pete Blair breaks down how traditional law enforcement firearms training is performed, and gives context to how EcoD can be applied to improve achieving goals, decision making, perception-action linkages and specifying information. Read the full article at the Tactical Science Substack here: https://lnkd.in/gnK5AmvV

    • 该图片无替代文字
  • In the last five years there was an average of 46 Active Attack events in the United States. 97.5% of the time, the attacker acted alone. The majority of attacks were carried out using a handgun (56.1%), with a small minority carried out by weapons other than firearms (6.2%). We define an active attack as follows:?an active attack occurs when an individual or individuals is actively killing or attempting to kill multiple unrelated people in a public space. The key component of this definition is the word?actively. For an event to qualify as an active attack, it must involve an active component. This requirement excludes cases where law enforcement is unaware that the attack is happening. The Research Department at The ALERRT Center recently updated our Attack Attack Data website. You can visit the improved and updated site here: https://lnkd.in/gujV3c-Q

    • 该图片无替代文字

相似主页

查看职位