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Course Criteria
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1.50 Credits
Class hours: 24-27 lecture. Prerequisite: Fire Technology 402. Provides current and potential public safety managers/ supervisors with the knowledge necessary to perform in a management/supervisory capacity at an incident or event being managed within the organizational guidelines, defined terminology, and common responsibilities and roles of the Incident Command System. 2133.50
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1.00 Credits
Class hours: 16-18 lecture. Provides current and potential public safety workers, who are likely first responders, with improved capability to respond to events involving hazardous materials in a safe and competent manner, within the typical resource and capability limitations at the operational level. Meets OSHA requirements under Title 8 CCR 5192 and 29 CFT 1910.120. 2133.50
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2.00 Credits
Class hours: 32-36 lecture. Limitation on Enrollment: Must show certification as a firefighter. Prerequisite: Fire Technology 402. Provides fire company officers with information and experience in command and control techniques used at the scene of an emergency. Emphasized topics include: organizational structure, authority, command, pre-planning, decision-making, personnel issues, and training techniques. May be taken twice. 2133.50
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2.00 Credits
Class hours: 32-36 lecture. Limitation on Enrollment: Must show certification as a firefighter. Prerequisite: Fire Technology 410. Provides fire company officers with information and experience in hazardous materials incident management skills. Emphasizes utilization of command principles, identification, assessment, special techniques, and emergency planning. May be taken twice.2133.50
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2.00 Credits
Class hours: 32-36 lecture. Limitation on Enrollment: Must show certification as a firefighter. Prerequisite: Fire Technology 411. Responsibilities of the fire company officer at a wildland/ urban interface incident. May be taken twice. 2133.50
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2.00 Credits
Class hours: 40 lecture. Advisory: Course assumes familiarity with firefighting procedures and protocols, as it is designed for certified fire personnel. Non-firefighters are permitted to take the course, however they are ineligible to apply for the State Fire Marshall CFTES certificate upon successful completion of the course. Develops/enhances the first line supervisor's ability to supervise subordinates. Introduces key management concepts and practices utilized in the California Fire Service, and includes discussions about decisionmaking, timemanagement, leadership styles, personal evaluations, and counseling guidelines. 2133.00
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2.00 Credits
Class hours: 40 lecture. Advisory: Course assumes familiarity with firefighting procedures and protocols, as it is designed for certified fire personnel. Non-firefighters are permitted to take the course, however they are ineligible to apply for the State Fire Marshall CFTES certificate upon successful completion of the course.
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0.50 - 6.00 Credits
Class hours: 16-18 hours/term lecture for each unit of credit. Transfer Credit: CSU; UC credit limitations. See counselor. Special interest class of varying length for students who seek further development in specific areas of literature and extended knowledge of the language and culture. Variety of topics offered with particular emphasis determined by the instructor. May be taken for a maximum of nine units; however, no single-subject, special-interest class may be repeated. 1102.00
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3.00 Credits
Class hours: 48-54 lecture. Transfer Credit: CSU; UC. Regional geography of the world, surveying the major cultural and physical regions. Use ofmaps and regional analysis to interpret world patterns of demography, economies, resources, religions, and languages in relationship to landforms and climate. Current world problems discussed in an international framework. 2206.00
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3.00 Credits
Class hours: 48-54 lecture. Transfer Credit: CSU; UC. Cultural geography of North America in time and space. The dynamics and ethnicity of North American culture is traced through discovery, exploration, settlement patterns, aboriginal patterns, national interests, economic exploitation, agriculture, commerce, ethnicity, demography, and changing attitudes. Emphasis on the origin and diffusion of North American cultural traditions. 2206.00
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