NEW YORK CITY POLICE DEPARTMENT
Student Officer Training Program -
Current Courses
Titles, descriptions, and credit recommendations for all learning experiences
recommended for college credit within the Student Officer Training
Program - Current Courses section can be found below. To locate information
on additional learning experiences, which have also been recommended for college
credit, use the Organization Directory Page link above for
a complete list of titles for all learning
experiences or use the following links to go directly to other
sections:
Civilian Training
In-Service Training
Student
Officer Training Program - Retired Courses
Titles of all evaluated
learning experiences in the Student Officer Training Program- Current Courses
section
Student Officer
Training Program - Current Courses
1. Emergency Vehicle Operation
2. Field Training Program
3. Physical Education
4. Police Crisis
Intervention
5. Police Field Problems
6. Police Investigation
and Reporting
7. Policing a Democracy
8. Policing Special Populations
9. Procedural Law
10. Substantive Law
11. Terrorism Awareness
and Response
Descriptions and
credit recommendations
Student Officer
Training Program
Location: New York City Police Academy, 235 East 20th St.,
New York, NY, unless otherwise noted.
Length: Approximately 600 hours (26 weeks).
Dates: July 2003 - Present.*
Objectives: Perform the duties of a police officer in a pro-active,
problem-solving capacity, identifying problems or conditions and developing
strategies to address them, delivering the services, and analyzing their
effectiveness; maintain a rigorous physical routine and the tactical knowledge
necessary to protect oneself and others.
Instruction: The components listed below constitute the Student
Officer Training Program conducted primarily by the New York City Police Academy.
This intensive program consists of 26 weeks of classroom instruction and field
instruction, supplemented by another six months in the Community Patrol Officer
Program under the close supervision of experienced officers. All new recruits
to the Police Department must undergo this training. Due to the integrated
nature of the curriculum as it unfolds over the 26 weeks, the descriptions,
which appear below, reflect the major themes that thread through the program
and correspond to content areas and course titles within degree programs where
credit may be awarded.
Credit recommendation: A total of 33 semester hours, distributed
as noted in the following 11 content areas, grouped alphabetically (10/04
revalidation). *NOTE: Earlier versions of the Student Officer
Training Program, dating back to January 1974, have been recommended for
college credit. Information on the credit recommendations can be found at
the Retired
Courses section.
1. Emergency Vehicle Operation
Location: Designated field training locations throughout the City
of New York.
Instruction: Legal aspects of vehicle operation; driving regulations;
causes of accidents; defensive driving attitude analysis; mandatory vehicle
inspection; anatomy of a crash; habit defense and stopping distances; lights
and sirens; negotiating the intersection; backing the vehicle; vehicle maintenance
and inspection; flare placement and accident situations; fueling vehicles;
steering techniques; use of mirrors; braking turns; safe driving techniques;
seat belts; road and weather conditions; expressway operations; rear anti-lock
braking systems; effects of alcohol and drugs on vehicle operation.
Credit recommendation: In the lower division baccalaureate/associate
degree category, 1 semester hour in Police Science or Criminal Justice
(10/04 revalidation).
2. Field Training Program
Location: Designated field training locations throughout the
City of New York.
Length: In addition to the didactic component of the Student Officer
Training Program, recruits engage in approximately 35 hours per week of on-the-job
practice.
Instruction: Upon graduating from the Police Academy, probationary
police officers are assigned to Precinct Field Training Units. Under the
direction of a field training sergeant and other ranking officers with
whom the probationary officer completes foot patrols and radio motor patrol
tours, they are shown the manner in which to respond to serious emergencies,
crimes in progress, tactical confrontations, and crowd control. The probationary
police officers are also thoroughly briefed and re-instructed on Department
policies and procedures. Monthly field training evaluations are prepared
by training supervisors on each student. The final evaluation (by the field
training sergeant) and certification as a police officer takes place at
the end of the probationary period.
Credit recommendation: In the upper division baccalaureate
degree category, 3 semester hours as an Internship in Police Science or Criminal
Justice (10/04 revalidation).
3. Physical Education
Part 1: Foundations of Physical Fitness
Part 2: Defensive Tactics
Part 3: American Heart Association Basic Life Support
Instruction: Part 1: Survey of physiological, psychological, and sociological
aspects of physical fitness; neuromuscular skill and biomechanics, scientific
approach toward assessing entry-level overall physical fitness, and methods
of improving and maintaining physical fitness; role of physical conditioning,
nutrition, and basic health habits. Part 2: Theory, skills,
and practice of judo, karate, and techniques from selected martial arts including
basic blows, throws, blocks and defenses; application of these skills to combative
situations. Defense skills necessary to protect oneself when securing an arrest
and confinement also stressed, including unarmed self-defense (sparring). Part
3: Land-based water rescue: safety procedures and use of flotation
devices and safety aids; principles of safety; theory and practice of first
aid procedures in emergency situations (shock, wounds, heart attacks, strokes)
and extrications in dangerous situations; instruction in basic skills of cardiopulmonary
resuscitation, including use of automatic external defibrillators. American
Red Cross certification in Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation is issued.
Credit recommendation: Part 1: In the lower division
baccalaureate/associate degree category or in the upper division baccalaureate
degree category, 2 semester hours in Physical Education (10/04 revalidation). Part
2: In the lower division baccalaureate/associate degree category
or in the upper division baccalaureate degree category, 2 semester hours
in Physical Education Activity Elective (10/04 revalidation). Part
3: In the lower division baccalaureate/associate degree category
or in the upper division baccalaureate degree category, 1 semester hour in
Physical Education (10/04 revalidation).
4. Police Crisis Intervention
Instruction: This component provides practical applications of theory
and police procedure designed to assist officers in interacting effectively
and humanely with crime victims, suspects, and parties to disputes, family
violence, and other interpersonal crises.
Credit recommendation: In the upper division baccalaureate degree
category, 3 semester hours in Police Science or Criminal Justice (10/04 revalidation). NOTE: This
component may be considered as either a didactic or practicum learning experience.
5. Police Field Problems
Instruction: The police officer’s ability to protect
lives, rights, and property while responding to critical events, such as disorders
and reports of violent crimes in progress is stressed. The tactics and strategies
are presented, which are designed to assist officers in accomplishing their
law enforcement and order maintenance tasks in manners least likely to result
in bloodshed, Constitutional violations, or friction between police and citizens. Role
plays and debriefings are provided.
Credit recommendation: In the upper division baccalaureate degree
category, 3 semester hours in Police Science or Criminal Justice (10/04 revalidation).
6. Police Investigation
and Reporting
Instruction: This component covers the proper selection, preparation,
and use of police and other governmental reports to facilitate police crime-fighting
and order maintenance tasks; computer applications in police investigations,
emphasizing access to official data bases.
Credit recommendation: In the lower division baccalaureate/associate
degree category, 3 semester hours in Police Science or Criminal Justice (10/04
revalidation). NOTE: This component may be considered as
either a didactic or practicum learning experience.
7. Policing a Democracy
Instruction: This component is an introduction to the role
of the police in American society with emphasis on the legal and ethical bases
of police authority and accountability. Police professionalism and responsiveness
to a diverse and changing community; structure of the NYPD; and the statutory,
judicial, and administrative mechanisms that define and enforce the limits
of police discretion are emphasized.
Credit recommendation: In the lower division baccalaureate/associate
degree category, 3 semester hours in Police Science or Criminal Justice (10/04
revalidation).
8. Policing Special Populations
Instruction: Detailed examinations of problems and issues presented
by major subpopulations among the clientele of the police, and of the effects
upon police officers of constant exposure to troubled people; identification
and analysis of strategies and techniques useful during interactions with children
and adolescents, families of missing persons, the mentally and emotionally
disturbed, and other people in crisis; discussion of techniques and departmental
services available to officers suffering from job or other personal stress.
A one-day interactive workshop augments instruction.
Credit recommendation: In the upper division baccalaureate degree
category, 3 semester hours in Police Science or Criminal Justice (10/04 revalidation).
9. Procedural Law
Instruction: This component is a survey of the statutory law,
judicial decisions, and administrative policies that define police authority
to arrest, to use force, and to issue summonses in lieu of arrest. The steps
in the judicial processes initiated when officers effect arrests are discussed.
Credit recommendation: In the upper division baccalaureate degree
category, 3 semester hours in Police Science or Criminal Justice (10/04 revalidation).
10. Substantive Law
Instruction: This component provides an analysis of the theories
and reasoning underlying laws that define specific criminal offenses, with
detailed treatment of major crime categories encountered by police officers.
Components of weapons laws, drug offenses, crimes against persons, including
domestic violence, larceny and property offenses, including theft, and offenses
against public order and the public trust are discussed.
Credit recommendation: In the upper division baccalaureate degree
category, 3 semester hours in Police Science or Criminal Justice (10/04 revalidation).
11. Terrorism Awareness
and Response
Instruction: This component identifies the fundamental and
underlying reasons why America and specifically New York City is a target for
terrorists, framed in a discussion of the differences among various terrorist
organizations and their terrorist tactics, and the ideological bases for terrorism. Additionally,
the course discusses the various government agencies that are involved in fighting
terrorism and the importance of front-line law enforcement in obtaining and
forwarding intelligence to investigating federal, state, and local agencies.
Students are briefed daily on local and global events as to their potential
effect on patrolling a very diverse populace and are trained in Chemical, Ordnance,
Biological, and Radiological (COBRA) first response, as well as in preserving
order and delivering vital police services in the midst of a wide-scale terrorist
attack.
Credit recommendation: In the lower division baccalaureate/associate
degree category, 3 semester hours in Police Science or Criminal Justice (10/04)
revalidation.
Updated 5/12/08
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