SingUp Now Help Contact Home Page The One Resource for Firefighters and the Fire Service
 
Search:
  Login Login     My Profile My Profile  
Products:
Fire News Fire Products Fire Research Topics Fire-EMS Wildland Firefighting Fire Training Fire Jobs Firefighter Safety Fire Forums

Don’t Let Them Go


Education and Training

Sponsors

Kidde Fire Trainers

Training Center Business Plans

Jones & Bartlett
Resources
24-7 EMS - Training Saves Lives Discuss Education and Training issues and news at FireRescue1 Forums Fire Department Training Network FirefighterHourly.com Firefighters Bookstore: Firefighter books, videos and software
All Resources

Featured Product Categories
Radios Thermal Imaging Footwear Emergency Response Software Helmets
View All Categories

Education and Training Tips
Chainsaw Training Be prepared for the unexpected before the battle begins Acquire resources for chainsaw training
More tips
Videos
Antioch Fire Department Training Burn Safety/Survival Hands-on Training
More Videos
Education and Training Products

Featured Products:

EOC Incident Commanders' Radio Interface™ from C-AT

Education and Training Article

Print Talk BackRegister RSSWhat's This

Don’t Let Them Go

By Scott Cook

Scott Cook
Firefighter Note to Self

Don’t let them go! In this case, I’m talking about your certifications: Hazmat, Instructor, EMT-I or P, etc. Several years ago, I let a few certifications go because:

  1. I wasn’t going to use those specific skills any more for personal reasons;
  2. I was young and thought it was too much trouble to keep up with the continuing education (CE) hours required to maintain the certifications;
  3. The full time job I work for did not—and still does not—require us to use the skills for the certifications anyway.
  4. Not using the skills, and thus not having the opportunity to maintain proficiency with the skills, I decided it wouldn’t be prudent to maintain a certification for a skill set I could not perform when necessary and wasn't allowed to do anyway. (A note about CE hours here: Keeping your CE hours current does not mean you’re keeping your skills/knowledge current; it simply means you were able to perform a skill or answer a question to the minimum degree required to get credit. Let’s be honest, some of the 40-hour CE programs out there can be completed in a few hours.)

So, I let a few certifications go ...

But now, I have to spend much more time and money to re-acquire the certifications than it would have taken to maintain the CE hours. Sixteen years later, I’ve changed my position on Nos. 1 and 2 above. As far as item No. 3, I now work part-time for a service that will pay me more, and let me use the skills I once had. As for item No. 4, I still feel the same way about CE hours. However, as I’ve matured over the past 16 years, I’ve realized that my values would have prevented me from making the claim that I was proficient at a task simply because I had maintained a set number of CE hours for it.

The bottom line: Do whatever you can to keep your certifications, even if you swear you’ll never use them again.



Print Talk BackRegister RSSWhat's This




Back to previous page






FIRERESCUE1 TOPICS
Fire Resources | Fire News | Fire Products | FR1 Video | Fire-EMS | Fire Careers | Firefighter Safety | Wildland Firefighting | Fire Video News | Fire Grants |

FIRERESCUE1 NETWORK
FlashoverTV.com | FireGrantsHelp.com | FireRehab.com | VolunteerFD.org | EMS1.com | PPE101.com | PraetorianGroup.com | Homeland1.com |

© Copyright 2008 - FireRescue1.com. All Rights Reserved.