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    Image for After-Action Review and Reporting: An Introduction

    Community Policing

    After-Action Review and Reporting: An Introduction
    eLearning Course
    1 Hour

    After-Action Review and Reporting: An Introduction

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    Course Overview: After-Action Review and Reporting: An Introduction, an eLearning course, provides an overview of after-action review and reporting processes, as applied within a law enforcement organization following incidents ranging from common, everyday situations to complex, high-impact, critical incidents.

    The application of after-action reviews is an effective organizational learning tool and powerful community policing strategy. This course equips law enforcement personnel with a basic understanding of when and in what circumstances an after-action may be best utilized, as well as how to conduct impactful reviews that result in written reports, including guidance on ways to organize, document, and communicate the findings of an after-action review. Although designed specifically for first line supervisors or officers in charge of conducting/overseeing the after-action process within an organization, this course benefits all local, state, and tribal law enforcement personnel, regardless of rank or position. Non-law enforcement community stakeholders may enhance their awareness of community policing efforts by taking this course. Learners may access and utilize an assortment of multimedia resources as needed in the future.

    Learning Objectives:

    • Identify the basic principles of community policing as they relate to the after-action process
    • Discover what makes after-actions a credible learning tool for law enforcement
    • Explore the role of after-actions in identifying and addressing wellness issues stemming from critical incidents
    • Explore the dynamic nature of the after-action review process
    • Identify ways to determine the type of review to conduct
    • Distinguish informal reviews from formal reviews, and the circumstances in which either may be most appropriate
    • Describe the leader or supervisor’s role in guiding and institutionalizing the process
    • Discover essential qualifications for an independent review team or consultant
    • Identify the role of comprehensive, well-written reports in the after-action review process
    • Examine the fundamental information typically included in written after-action reports
    • Explore the National Police Foundation’s online library of published Incident Reviews

    Target Audience: Public safety practitioners, first line supervisors or officers, local, state, and tribal law enforcement personnel, and non-law enforcement community stakeholders.

    Cooperative Partners: This tuition-free online training was developed by the National Center for Policing Innovation (NCPI), formerly known as Virginia Center for Policing Innovation, and was supported by cooperative agreement 2015-CK-WXK-003 by the U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS).

    Learning Hours: 1 hour including the pre-test and post-test.

    Is this POST approved in my state?

    Image for Community Policing Defined

    Community Policing

    Community Policing Defined
    eLearning Course
    4 Hours

    Community Policing Defined

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    Course Overview: Community Policing Defined, an eLearning course, provides learners with a basic awareness and understanding of the fundamental principles and best practices of community policing. This course examines practical problem-solving methodologies and applies best practices of community policing.

    Comprised of four modules, the topics explore partnerships, problem solving, and organizational transformation as they relate to specific issues and challenges facing today's law enforcement professionals and the communities they serve. Based on the Department of Justice, COPS Office publication of the same name, Community Policing Defined not only describes the practice of community policing, but also examines how it can be effectively applied.

    Through this course, learners examine the interconnectedness of Problem-Oriented Policing, the SARA model, and the Crime Triangle.

    Learning Objectives:

    • Define community policing
    • Describe the fundamental principles of community policing
    • Examine practical problem-solving methodologies, including the SARA model
    • Interpret best practices of community policing
    • Identify examples of ways in which a law enforcement agency can interact, partner, and work closely with members of the community in order to achieve a high level of community satisfaction and agency success
    • Examine the tangible means by which to build or improve the relationship between their law enforcement agencies and the communities they serve
    • Define collaborative partnerships utilized in community policing
    • Examine the importance of developing and maintaining long-term positive relationships with the community
    • Identify examples of effective collaborative partnerships
    • Define the organizational transformation component of community policing
    • Demonstrate relevance of organizational transformation to building partnerships and practicing problem solving
    • Examine organizational transformation in terms of culture, structures, and function
    • Consider the value of leadership and training as a catalyst for organizational transformation
    • Define the problem solving component of community policing
    • Explore Problem-Oriented Policing and its role in effective problem solving
    • Consider the problem solving processes and methodologies of the SARA model
    • Consider the role of the Crime Triangle (Problem Analysis Triangle) as a complementary tool to the SARA model

    Target Audience: Law enforcement, public safety professionals, community leaders, business owners, and other community stakeholders.

    Cooperative Partners: This tuition-free online training was developed by the National Center for Policing Innovation (NCPI), formerly known as Virginia Center for Policing Innovation, and was originally supported by cooperative agreement 2009-RM-WXK-001 by the U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS).

    Learning Hours: 4 hours including the pre-test and post-test. 

    Is this POST approved in my state?

    Image for Community Policing: Improving Police Efficacy and Building Trust

    Community Policing

    Community Policing: Improving Police Efficacy and Building Trust
    eLearning Course
    6 Hours

    Community Policing: Improving Police Efficacy and Building Trust

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    Course Overview: Community Policing: Improving Police Efficacy and Building Trust (CPIPEBT), an eLearning course, enhances learners’ awareness of and skills and abilities to engage in contemporary policing strategies founded in the principles of community policing.

    Since the early 1980s, the principles of community policing have been a driving force in American law enforcement. Yet for all its past success, community policing may never have been as vital to law enforcement and the well-being of our communities as it is today. Exploring how emerging issues are necessitating a commitment to the key components of community policing, this course focuses on partnerships, organizational transformation, and problem solving.

    The course examines the current state of policing—both locally and nationally—addressing a multitude of factors that challenge the effectiveness of law enforcement agencies and the well-being of the communities they serve. CPIPEBT urges learners to explore the principles and practices of community policing as a means of achieving the public safety mission with greater efficiency by gaining and maintaining public trust and engaging the community in the shared responsibility of effective policing.

    Learning Objectives:

    • Identify current and emerging challenges in policing
    • Review the principles of community policing
    • Identify current policing paradigms
    • Explain the historical evolution of community policing
    • Explain the community policing principles of partnerships, problem solving, and organizational transformation
    • Identify current and emerging obstacles to implementing positive initiatives that promote effective policing
    • Apply strategies for sustaining improvements to the challenges of policing in effort to view each as an opportunity for change
    • Identify the principles of community policing as actionable and vital practices for keeping effective change in place
    • Apply the principles of community policing to the improvement of public safety at the community level

    Target Audience: Law enforcement practitioners, criminal justice and public safety professionals, and other community stakeholders.

    Cooperative Partners: This tuition-free online training was developed by the National Center for Policing Innovation (NCPI), formerly known as Virginia Center for Policing Innovation, and was originally supported by cooperative agreement 2014-CK-WXK-027 by the U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS).

    Learning Hours: 6 hours including the pre-test and post-test.

    Is this POST approved in my state?

    Image for Contemporary Approaches for Responding Effectively to Community-Defined Disorder

    Crime Prevention

    Contemporary Approaches for Responding Effectively to Community-Defined Disorder
    eLearning Course
    4 Hours

    Contemporary Approaches for Responding Effectively to Community-Defined Disorder

    Image for Contemporary Approaches for Responding Effectively to Community-Defined Disorder
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    Course Overview: Contemporary Approaches for Responding Effectively to Community-Defined Disorder (CARE CDD) consists of two separate eLearning courses, one designed for law enforcement practitioners and one geared specifically for executives, that examine successful initiatives around the country. These initiatives include homeless outreach teams, mental health crisis intervention, domestic abuse harm reduction, substance use disorder treatment, gang violence prevention, and more—demonstrating a “community care” framework for responding effectively to a variety of disorder and crime problems. The courses examine the role of law enforcement officers and agencies in developing, implementing, sustaining, and evaluating these types of community-based problem-solving strategies. 

    Public safety agencies recognize that many types of harm can affect the health of a community—not just the major crime incidents that dominate headlines, but also the everyday disorder problems that negatively impact community members and generate frequent calls for service. In many cases, past efforts to manage disorder have focused on enforcement actions targeting low-level offenses. However, research and practice indicate that aggressive, enforcement-focused order maintenance strategies are ineffective and can undermine relationships between law enforcement and community members.  

    Increasingly, public safety professionals recognize the need for innovative problem solving to address disorder and crime problems, which occur disproportionately in under-resourced neighborhoods. Responding to complex problems requires law enforcement to form partnerships with community stakeholders and other agencies to enact multi-faceted initiatives. Such efforts represent a fundamental change in the way we think about public safety, emphasizing the collaborative role of police and other law enforcement practitioners as caretakers of their communities.  

    To help connect principles to practice, a series of field-driven video case briefings provides insight on innovative practices that law enforcement practitioners and executives can apply in their own communities. The case studies feature interviews with subject matters experts currently engaged in community-oriented programs to manage disorder problems in their jurisdictions.  

    Learning Objectives:

    • Explain how the principles and practices of community policing can be applied to address community-defined disorder
    • Describe the role of law enforcement in managing community-defined disorder
    • Differentiate between varying approaches to order maintenance
    • Identify the principles of community policing
    • Analyze case studies to identify strategies that can be applied in your community
    • Apply problem-solving methods to identify, define, and respond to community-defined disorder problems
    • Describe the benefits of proactive, collaborative problem solving
    • Explain how to identify and define disorder problems that require intervention
    • Identify strategies for developing effective responses to disorder problems
    • Analyze case studies to identify strategies that can be applied in your community
    • Identify collaboration and communication strategies to support effective problem solving  
    • List benefits of using a collaborative model to improve quality of life in the community
    • Explain how to establish a community of practice
    • Identify structures to promote collaboration among organization members
    • Analyze case studies to identify strategies that can be applied in your community
    • Describe how problem-solving initiatives to address disorder can be sustained for long-term success 
    • Identify factors that may influence the sustainability of problem-solving initiatives
    • Describe appropriate methods for evaluating the success of problem-solving initiatives
    • Explain the role of discretion when managing disorder in the community
    • Analyze case studies to identify strategies that can be applied in your community

    Target Audience: This course is designed as a professional development program for law enforcement practitioners representing agencies of all sizes and demographics. This course may also be a valuable tool for non-law-enforcement community stakeholders to enhance their awareness of law enforcement efforts.

    Cooperative Partners: This tuition-free online training was developed by the National Center for Policing Innovation (NCPI), formerly known as Virginia Center for Policing Innovation, and was originally supported by cooperative agreement 2018-CK-WXK-018 by the U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS).

    Learning Hours: 4 hours including the pre-test and post-test.

    Is this POST approved in my state?

    Image for Contemporary Approaches for Responding Effectively to Community-Defined Disorder for Executives

    Crime Prevention

    Contemporary Approaches for Responding Effectively to Community-Defined Disorder for Executives
    eLearning Course
    4 Hours

    Contemporary Approaches for Responding Effectively to Community-Defined Disorder for Executives

    Image for Contemporary Approaches for Responding Effectively to Community-Defined Disorder for Executives
    Start

    Course Overview: Contemporary Approaches for Responding Effectively to Community-Defined Disorder (CARE CDD) consists of two separate eLearning courses, one designed for law enforcement practitioners and one geared specifically for executives, that examine successful initiatives around the country. These initiatives include homeless outreach teams, mental health crisis intervention, domestic abuse harm reduction, substance use disorder treatment, gang violence prevention, and more—demonstrating a “community care” framework for responding effectively to a variety of disorder and crime problems. The courses examine the role of law enforcement officers and agencies in developing, implementing, sustaining, and evaluating these types of community-based problem-solving strategies. 

    Public safety agencies recognize that many types of harm can affect the health of a community—not just the major crime incidents that dominate headlines, but also the everyday disorder problems that negatively impact community members and generate frequent calls for service. In many cases, past efforts to manage disorder have focused on enforcement actions targeting low-level offenses. However, research and practice indicate that aggressive, enforcement-focused order maintenance strategies are ineffective and can undermine relationships between law enforcement and community members.  

    Increasingly, public safety professionals recognize the need for innovative problem solving to address disorder and crime problems, which occur disproportionately in under-resourced neighborhoods. Responding to complex problems requires law enforcement to form partnerships with community stakeholders and other agencies to enact multi-faceted initiatives. Such efforts represent a fundamental change in the way we think about public safety, emphasizing the collaborative role of police and other law enforcement practitioners as caretakers of their communities.  

    To help connect principles to practice, a series of field-driven video case briefings provides insight on innovative practices that law enforcement practitioners and executives can apply in their own communities. The case studies feature interviews with subject matters experts currently engaged in community-oriented programs to manage disorder problems in their jurisdictions.  

    Learning Objectives:

    • Explain how the principles and practices of community policing can be applied to address community-defined disorder.
    • Describe the role of law enforcement in managing community-defined disorder.
    • Differentiate between varying approaches to order maintenance.
    • Explain the relationship between disorder policing and community policing.
    • Analyze case studies to identify strategies that can be applied in your community.
    • Apply problem-solving methods to identify, define, and respond to community-defined disorder problems.
    • Describe the benefits of proactive, collaborative problem solving.
    • Explain how to identify and define disorder problems that require intervention.
    • Identify partners who can share resources to address specific disorder problems in the community.
    • Develop effective responses to community-defined disorder.
    • Analyze case studies to identify strategies that can be applied in your community.
    • Identify collaboration and communication strategies to support effective problem solving.  
    • Based on the needs of the agency, select appropriate leadership strategies to support effective order maintenance strategies.
    • List benefits of using a collaborative model to improve quality of life in the community.
    • Identify methods for communicating effectively with community members about quality-of-life initiatives. 
    • Identify structures to promote collaboration among organization members.
    • Analyze case studies to identify strategies that can be applied in your community.
    • Describe how problem-solving initiatives to address disorder can be sustained for long-term success. 
    • Identify factors that may influence the sustainability of problem-solving initiatives.
    • Explain the role of discretion when managing disorder in the community.
    • Develop a plan for the training and ongoing professional development of personnel involved in problem-solving initiatives.
    • Select appropriate performance measures for evaluating the success of first-line personnel.
    • Analyze case studies to identify strategies that can be applied in your community.

    Target Audience: Developed as a stand-alone companion to the CARE CDD course for practitioners, this course is streamlined for law enforcement executives and presented in an easily accessible, self-paced format. CARE CDD for Executives is ideal for leadership personnel representing agencies of all sizes and demographics. 

    Cooperative Partners: This tuition-free online training was developed by the National Center for Policing Innovation (NCPI), formerly known as Virginia Center for Policing Innovation, and was originally supported by cooperative agreement 2018-CK-WXK-018 by the U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS).

    Learning Hours: 4 hours including the pre-test and post-test.

    Is this POST approved in my state?

    Image for Crime Reduction: Enforcement and Prevention Strategies

    Crime Prevention

    Crime Reduction: Enforcement and Prevention Strategies
    eLearning Course
    4 Hours

    Crime Reduction: Enforcement and Prevention Strategies

    Image for Crime Reduction: Enforcement and Prevention Strategies
    Start

    Course Overview: Crime Reduction: Enforcement and Prevention Strategies, an eLearning course, offers current guidance on effective enforcement and policing strategies aimed at crime reduction. The course also explores the application of crime prevention as a means of actively interdicting and preventing crime in our nation’s communities.

    To help connect principles to practice, this course highlights crime reduction initiatives undertaken by law enforcement agencies around the country, demonstrating how policing strategies can be applied in varying contexts. Through video interviews and case studies, each module presents real-world examples to illustrate the strategies presented in the course. The course benefits law enforcement personnel of all assignments, representing agencies of all sizes and demographics, who play a role in crime reduction. Non-law enforcement community stakeholders may use this content to enhance their awareness of crime reduction efforts.

    Learning Objectives:

    • Identify challenges associated with crime reduction
    • Identify ways in which police organizational structures contribute to crime reduction efforts
    • Distinguish between immediate, short-term, and long-term strategies to reduce crime
    • Recognize the stages of the SARA model
    • Distinguish between types of crime patterns
    • Apply the problem analysis triangle to an authentic crime scenario
    • Analyze responses to crime patterns
    • Identify situational crime prevention techniques to address a long-term crime problem scenario
    • Analyze offender-focused strategies used as part of a focused-deterrence approach to crime reduction
    • Identify community-oriented strategies to reduce crime through a proactive, preventive approach

    Target Audience: Law enforcement personnel and non-law enforcement community stakeholders.

    Cooperative Partners: This tuition-free online training was developed by the National Center for Policing Innovation (NCPI), formerly known as Virginia Center for Policing Innovation, and was originally supported by cooperative agreement 2017-CK-WXK-001 by the U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Community Oriented Policing Services.

    Learning Hours: 4 hours including the pre-test and post-test.

    Is this POST approved in my state?

    Image for Crisis Intervention First Look: Focused Response for Veterans

    Crisis Response

    Crisis Intervention First Look: Focused Response for Veterans
    eLearning Course
    1 Hour

    Crisis Intervention First Look: Focused Response for Veterans

    Image for Crisis Intervention First Look: Focused Response for Veterans
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    Course Overview: Crisis Intervention First Look: Focused Response for Veterans, an eLearning course, offers insights and practical guidance on the applicability of Crisis Intervention Teams (CIT) for veterans in crisis. A significant aspect of responding to veterans in mental health crises is the delivery of appropriate and effective service. Addressing psychological distress among those who have served in our nation’s armed forces introduces a variety of unique factors to crisis response.

    First responders and community service providers are turning to the CIT and Veterans Response Team models for a collaborative, structured, and coordinated approach to veteran-focused crisis response. The course examines factors impacting veterans’ mental health, the applicability of CIT in veteran-crisis response and Veterans Response Teams, and next steps and resources for implementation. Gain perspective on these topics from law enforcement officers, mental-health practitioners, and veteran and mental-health advocates.

     Learning Objectives:

    • Examine psychological distress among veterans
    • Examine possible indicators of psychological distress that may manifest in veterans
    • Explore key factors impacting veterans in need of mental health support
    • Recall current veteran-focused crisis response practices, including Veterans Response teams being implemented by CIT practitioners
    • Describe elements of the CIT model that may effectively serve veterans in crisis and differentiate the additional elements in a Veterans Response team.
    • Examine the goals and desired outcomes related to veteran-focused crisis response and the CIT model
    • Recognize the next steps in Veterans Response Teams implementation planning
    • Examine the benefits of collaborating with veteran support organizations and advocacy groups when planning CIT or Veterans Response Teams implementation

    Target Audience: Public safety and community service practitioners, decision-makers, and policy planners from any discipline involved in facilitating effective responses to mental health crises experienced by veterans.

    Cooperative Partners: This tuition-free online training was developed by the National Center for Policing Innovation (NCPI) and was originally supported by cooperative agreement 15JCOPS-21-GK-02306-SPPS by the U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Community Oriented Policing Services.

    Learning Hours: 1 hour including the pre-test and post-test.

    Is this POST approved in my state?

    Image for Crisis Intervention First Look: Focused Response for Youth

    Crisis Response

    Crisis Intervention First Look: Focused Response for Youth
    eLearning Course
    1 Hour

    Crisis Intervention First Look: Focused Response for Youth

    Image for Crisis Intervention First Look: Focused Response for Youth
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    Course Overview: Crisis Intervention First Look: Focused Response for Youth, an eLearning course, offers insights and practical guidance on the applicability of Crisis Intervention Teams (CIT) for the youth population. As children and teens confront startling rates of psychological distress, first responders and community service providers turn to the CIT model for a collaborative, structured, and coordinated response.

    The course explores the growing factors impacting youth mental health and the needs of various youth populations.  Focusing on the applicability of CIT youth crisis response, the course provides next steps and resources for CIT implementation. Law enforcement officers, mental health practitioners, and mental health advocates draw upon their unique experiences to share best practices.

    Learning Objectives:

    • Examine the contributing factors to mental health crises in young people
    • Explore the impact of youth mental health issues on communities
    • Examine the need for crisis response for youth
    • Explore current youth-focused crisis response practices being implemented by CIT practitioners
    • Examine the goals and desired outcomes related to youth-focused crisis response and the CIT model
    • Identify the potential benefits of CIT implementation on youth-focused crisis response
    • Explore the next steps in CIT implementation planning to support youth in crisis
    • Identify key national CIT, youth support and mental health organizations and resources

    Target Audience: Public safety and community service practitioners, decision makers, and policy planners from any discipline involved in facilitating effective responses to youth mental-health crises.

    Cooperative Partners: This tuition-free online training was developed by the National Center for Policing Innovation (NCPI) and was originally supported by cooperative agreement 15JCOPS-21-GK-02306-SPPS by the U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Community Oriented Policing Services.

    Learning Hours: 1 hour including the pre-test and post-test.

    Is this POST approved in my state?

    Image for Crisis Intervention: Overview of Effective Models

    Crisis Response

    Crisis Intervention: Overview of Effective Models
    eLearning Course
    4 Hours

    Crisis Intervention: Overview of Effective Models

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    Course Overview: Crisis Intervention: Overview of Effective Models, an eLearning course, offers insights and practical guidance on the applicability of Crisis Intervention Teams (CIT). Mental health support and responding to those in crisis are two of the paramount public safety challenges facing our nation’s communities. A significant aspect of these challenges is the delivery of appropriate and effective services to those who find themselves in crisis.

    Faced with alarming rates of psychological distress within communities across the nation, first responders and community service providers are turning to the CIT Model for a collaborative, structured, and coordinated response. The course addresses the rise in mental health crises, the applicability of the CIT Model in crisis response, and next steps and resources for CIT implementation. Gain perspective on these topics from law enforcement officers, mental-health practitioners, and mental-health advocates.

    Learning Objectives:

    • Examine key aspects of the current mental health crisis
    • Recognize the range of crisis response options and models
    • Describe the ways in which CIT implementation may benefit police, mental health agencies, and the public
    • Identify the goals and desired outcomes related to the CIT Model
    • Examine the community-based and collaborative dynamics of the CIT Model
    • Identify the relationship between CIT and community policing
    • Explain the partnership between law enforcement and mental health agencies in a CIT program
    • Explore the opportunities to build program capacity through stakeholder engagement and feedback
    • Illustrate the characteristics of effective crisis response systems
    • Describe practices that may assist partnership agencies in effective implementation planning, community engagement, and response to challenges
    • Consider the composition of a crisis response steering committee
    • Highlight pre-planning considerations such as funding, training, personnel, and identifying resources
    • Identify key national, CIT, and mental health organizations and resources
    • Introduce the CIT Programs Best Practices Guide and the CIT ASSIST Resource Center
    • Introduce the web-based supplemental courses that complement this course

    Target Audience: Decision makers, policy planners, and leadership in law enforcement and public safety agencies.

    Cooperative Partners: This tuition-free online training was developed by the National Center for Policing Innovation (NCPI) and was originally supported by cooperative agreement 15JCOPS-21-GK-02306-SPPS by the U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Community Oriented Policing Services.

    Learning Hours: 4 hours including the pre-test and post-test.

    Is this POST approved in my state?

    Image for Ethical Decision Making: Policing with Principled Insight

    Officer Wellness & Safety

    Ethical Decision Making: Policing with Principled Insight
    eLearning Course
    4 Hours

    Ethical Decision Making: Policing with Principled Insight

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    Course Overview: Ethical Decision Making: Policing with Principled Insight, an eLearning course, explores the practice of decision making and the ethical principles that support effective policing with a focus on perspective, purpose, obligation, and integrity. Take a thought-provoking journey that explores the practice of decision making and the ethical principles that support effective policing.

    This course emphasizes that police ethics are not just an after-thought or a means of discouraging bad behavior; instead, ethics are a controlling insight that inform and guide police practitioners from an internal, personal capacity. Join a 2500-year-old conversation on ethical decision making while exploring realistic, modern-day challenges faced by policing professionals. Recognizing that for policing professionals, public trust, integrity, and liability hinge on every decision, this concise and relevant course addresses the realities of policing in the 21st century.

    Learning Objectives:

    • Define and identify characteristics of ethics
    • Explain the concept of "A Priori" knowledge (Thinking Backwards) as a means of building a body of ethical knowledge
    • Explain the concept of a controlling insight and a delineated process for developing it as part of ethical decision making
    • Discuss the relationship between effective community policing and ethical decision making
    • Discuss the concepts of Perspective and Paradigms and their relationship to ethical decision making
    • Discuss the relationship between effective community policing and ethical decision making
    • Explain the concept of De-Policing and its relationship to ethical policing practices
    • Access the Police Ethical Navigator (PEN) and apply module content in completing the PEN activities and exercises
    • Explain the concept of Purpose and its relationship to Perspective and ethical decision making
    • Discuss the fundamental purpose of policing in terms of societal stability
    • Explain the concept of Virtue Ethics in terms of a sense of obligation and ethical decision making
    • Explain the concept of Formalism in terms of a sense of obligation and ethical decision making
    • Explain the concept of Utilitarianism in terms of a sense of obligation and ethical decision making
    • Explain the concept of Integrity as it relates to choice and ethical decision making
    • Identify the steps of the decision making process
    • Explain the relationship between ethics and the science and mechanics of the decision making process
    • Identify the physiological processes involved in decision making
    • Identify the role that awareness plays in ethical decision making
    • Explain strategic approaches that tend to improve ethical decision making

    Target Audience: Law enforcement practitioners, criminal justice and public safety professionals, and other community stakeholders.

    Cooperative Partners: This tuition-free online training was developed by the National Center for Policing Innovation (NCPI), formerly known as Virginia Center for Policing Innovation, and was originally supported by cooperative agreement 2012-CK-WXK-011 by the U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS).

    Learning Hours: 4 hours including the pre-test and post-test.

    Is this POST approved in my state?

    Image for New Perspectives on Community Policing

    Community Policing

    New Perspectives on Community Policing
    eLearning Course
    4 Hours

    New Perspectives on Community Policing

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    Course Overview: New Perspectives on Community Policing, an eLearning course, examines the key components of community policing: community partnerships, organizational transformation, and problem solving.

    Providing an overview of the dramatic shifts and challenges faced by law enforcement agencies and the communities they serve, the course also offers problem-solving tools, examples of successful police and community partnerships, and numerous community-policing resources.

    New Perspectives on Community Policing, a flexible, interactive, and relevant course, provides an outstanding opportunity for learners to gain new insights on community policing and its role in today's complex world.

    Learning Objectives:

    • Define new and emerging communities
    • Identify community dynamics and structures related to new and emerging communities
    • Explain the implications that new and emerging communities have on policing
    • Define new and emerging organizational challenges facing law enforcement agencies
    • Identify the implications that organizational change may have on law enforcement agency functions and capacities
    • Identify strategies and philosophies that may simultaneously promote successful organizational transformation and the practice of community oriented policing
    • Identify several emerging issues which impact community policing
    • Explain non-traditional threats to the community through examples of crimes and disorder
    • Explain the importance of community partnerships and problem solving elements of the Community Policing Principles as they pertain to issues and threats
    • Identify the fundamentals of community policing and how they apply to change management
    • Identify the role of perspective in proactive problem solving
    • Apply R.O.A.R. to the module’s interactive exercise

    Target Audience: Law enforcement, criminal justice professionals, and other community stakeholders.

    Cooperative Partners: This tuition-free online training was developed in joint partnership between the National Center for Policing Innovation (NCPI), formerly known as Virginia Center for Policing Innovation, and the Western Community Policing Institute (WCPI) and was originally supported by cooperative agreement 2008-CK-WXK-003 by the U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS).

    Learning Hours: 4 hours including the pre-test and post-test.

    Is this POST approved in my state?

    Image for Pathways to Resiliency: Community Policing and Countering Violent Extremism

    Community Policing

    Pathways to Resiliency: Community Policing and Countering Violent Extremism
    eLearning Course
    4 Hours

    Pathways to Resiliency: Community Policing and Countering Violent Extremism

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    Course Overview: 

    Pathways to Resiliency: Community Policing and Countering Violent Extremism, an eLearning course, highlights community-based efforts to address the threat of violent extremism and targeted violence through partnerships, problem solving, and community policing strategies. Recognizing that violent extremism and targeted violence are continuous sources of concern for our nation’s communities and the public safety agencies that protect them, this course offers insights, guidance, and case studies that are relevant as well as time-tested.

    Drawing on unique approaches from across the nation, this course features video case studies of agencies and organizations that have effectively used community policing strategies in innovative and proactive ways. From the cityscapes of Los Angeles and Denver to the historic streets of Lewiston, Maine and the thriving campus of Virginia Commonwealth University, the course looks at examples of communities that have taken practical steps on the pathway to countering the threat of violent extremism and building resiliency through community policing.

    Pathways to Resiliency: Community Policing and Countering Violent Extremism complements the time-tested case studies with resource links that allow learners to quickly access the latest and most relevant information from organizations such as the United States Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the United States Department of Homeland Security (DHS).  Additionally, links to the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS) and other resources offer the latest guidance on law enforcement best practices and effective community policing. This course benefits all local, state, and tribal law enforcement personnel and stakeholders concerned with public safety and community resilience.

    Learning Objectives:

    • Recognize community policing as an aspect of community-based efforts to counter the threat of violent extremism
    • Acquire a basic understanding of violent extremism
    • Acquire a basic understanding of mobilization to violence
    • Recognize dynamics underlying violent extremism such as youth susceptibility and social media
    • Consider the role of community policing in building resiliency to violent extremism
    • Recognize community policing practices exemplified in the Denver case study as examples of community-based efforts to counter the threat of violent extremism
    • Recognize community policing practices exemplified in the Los Angeles case study as examples of community-based efforts to counter the threat of violent extremism
    • Recognize community policing practices exemplified in the Lewiston case study as aspect of community-based efforts to counter the threat of violent extremism
    • Recognize community policing practices exemplified in the VCU case study as examples of community-based efforts to counter the threat of violent extremism
    • Explore each case study’s initiatives related to countering violent extremism
    • Explore each case study’s key partnerships necessary for building community resiliency
    • Explore each case study’s youth engagement strategies
    • Consider the applicability of strategies examined in each module’s content to own community or jurisdiction

    Target Audience: 

    Law enforcement officials and other public safety practitioners with an interest in applying the philosophy of community policing in the context of improving community resiliency to violent extremism and similar targeted violence.

    Cooperative Partners: 

    This tuition-free online training was developed by the National Center for Policing Innovation (NCPI), formerly known as the Virginia Center for Policing Innovation, and was supported by Cooperative Agreement 2016CKWXK010 and 15JCOPS-22-GK-03547-PPSE by the U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS).


    Learning Hours: 

    4 hours including the pre-test and post-test.


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    This project is supported by cooperative agreement numbers 15JCOPS21GK02125MUMU, 15JCOPS22GK03547PPSE, and 15JCOPS-23-GK-03995-MUMU awarded by the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services, U.S. Department of Justice. The opinions contained herein are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent the official position or policies of the U.S. Department of Justice. References to specific agencies, companies, products, or services should not be considered an endorsement by the author(s) or the U.S. Department of Justice. Rather, the references are illustrations to supplement discussion of the issues. The Internet references cited in this publication were valid as of the date of this publication. Given that URLs and websites are in constant flux, neither the author(s) nor the COPS Office can vouch for their current validity.

    NEED HELP? Contact us via email at info@copstrainingportal.org. If you are experiencing issues with a course, please include the course name.
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