Specifications include, but are not limited to: There will be two training classes: The first will be held December 3 – 7, 2018 from 7:00 am to 3:00 pm and the second will be held February 25 – March 1, 2019 from 7:00 am to 3:00 pm. Each class will have between 30 – 50 students. LEARNING GOALS Describe the nature of tactical science and how it is commonly applied by people. Explain the critical importance of understanding fundamental scientific concepts in order to apply appropriate actions to achieve satisfactory resolutions. Cite primary types of crises most commonly encountered by the safety services and explain what distinguishes them from each other. Cite distinct factors present in every crisis, regardless of how it unfolds. The significance of an emergent multi-organizational network, as well as how it evolves and contributes to coordination, affixing responsibility, allocating resources, and distributing power. Explain common tactics used by the law enforcement community in resolving adversarial crises and explain their advantages and disadvantages. Apply terrain analysis and explain how various terrain features will affect actions to achieve a satisfactory outcome. Describe and explain the principle objective in the dimension of time. Explain the concept of multidimensional space and how the various dimensions interact with one another, as well as how they affect the attainment of critical objectives. Describe difficulties involved in producing intelligence from raw data. Describe the cyclical process involved in identifying, collecting, processing, and disseminating intelligence to units and individuals with different needs. Components for intelligence field reports and why a standard format facilitates analysis. Describe how logistics is essential for sustaining operations and how the subordinate roles within the logistics function must interact to ensure the necessary personnel and material are available when needed.