Which part(s) of the course was MOST valuable to you. Please explain why.
Hands on activities help the knowledge and gave a better understanding of everyone's participating role in an event.
Tabletop exercises and written plans are essential starting points, but they can’t show how your system performs when the clock is ticking. ASIM Advanced is a 3‑day, 24‑hour, high‑fidelity simulation course for up to 60 responders that runs 10 complete active shooter and complex coordinated attack incidents from first call to last transport. Your full team sees how the ASIM Checklist performs under pressure across law, fire, EMS, dispatch, PIO, emergency management, and air assets.
Most agencies have plans, policies, and tabletop exercises, but very few have seen their full team manage multiple complex attacks at operational tempo. ASIM Advanced brings law enforcement, fire, EMS, dispatch, PIO, emergency management into the same room and the same simulated incidents. You get real repetitions, real decisions, and real data on how your system performs when seconds matter.
Move beyond discussion‑based exercises into 3D simulation where radio traffic, injects, and timelines force real‑time command and control decisions.
Run 10 complete incidents using the ASIM Checklist so every function practices the same priorities, language, and expectations across agencies.
Run your full team through realistic, high-pressure incidents so leaders leave with a clearer understanding of how the system performs, where coordination breaks down, and what needs follow-up.
ASIM Advanced is a 24‑hour, 3‑day in‑person course for up to 60 participants across law enforcement, fire/EMS, dispatch, PIO, and emergency management. Using the NIMSPro™ 3D Simulation System, your team runs 10 complete incidents that build from basic active shooter events to complex coordinated attacks with IEDs and barricaded or hostage‑taking attackers. Participants rotate through ASIM Checklist positions, gaining role‑specific experience and system‑wide understanding.
Orientation to the ASIM Checklist, incident profiles, and simulation environment, followed by initial incidents that establish common roles, communications, and priorities.
Run multiple moderate‑complexity incidents that stress‑test unified command, resource deployment, medical operations, communications, and multi‑agency coordination.
Tackle complex coordinated attacks and special‑problem incidents, then complete structured after‑action reviews to capture gaps, strengths, and next steps for your region.
ASIM Advanced puts your people inside realistic, high‑tempo incidents without the risks and costs of full‑scale field exercises. Participants leave with muscle memory for their roles, a shared mental model across disciplines, and a clear picture of how the system performs when everything is on the line.
Responders work in a NIMSPro™ simulation lab that mirrors real‑world radio traffic, timelines, and injects from first 911 call to last patient transport.
Law enforcement, fire, EMS, dispatch, PIO, and emergency management representatives work side by side, building trust and shared expectations across agencies.
Participants rotate through incident commander, operations, medical, staging, perimeter, and other key positions so they understand how each role affects the whole incident.
Each incident ends with a guided after‑action review led by NCIER instructors, connecting decisions and timelines back to the ASIM Checklist and your local policies.
You leave ASIM Advanced with a stronger shared picture of how your system performs under pressure, where the friction points are, and what readiness work needs attention next.
Bring your full team into the same incident before a real one forces the issue.
Hosts provide the venue and up to 60 participants across law enforcement, fire/EMS, dispatch, PIO, and emergency management. NCIER brings the mobile NIMSPro™ simulation lab, instructor team, AV, incident scenarios, and all course materials.
Here’s what happens over the next 1 business day.
Keep an eye out for a call from (407) 490-1300. If you don’t hear from us within 1 business day, call us at (407) 490-1300.
Prefer to talk now? Call (407) 490-1300.
ASIM Advanced is the simulation step that turns ASIM from a classroom concept into proven performance across your full team.
15–20 minutes, no obligation. We’ll help you figure out if hosting ASIM Advanced makes sense for your agency or region.
Schedule a Brief CallWhich part(s) of the course was MOST valuable to you. Please explain why.
Hands on activities help the knowledge and gave a better understanding of everyone's participating role in an event.
Which part(s) of the course was LEAST valuable to you? Please explain why.
Situation fatigue by day three.
Please provide any other comments or suggestions you have for improving this course.
It would be nice to finish with the original day 1 scenario with the same people in the same role to see how all had improved.
What other training is most important to you now that you have completed this course?
More ICS and Management training.
Which part(s) of the course was MOST valuable to you. Please explain why.
All parts were valuable. learning more about real world attacks was interesting.
Which part(s) of the course was LEAST valuable to you? Please explain why.
None.
Please provide any other comments or suggestions you have for improving this course.
Maybe try to get some real world recordings of 911 calls and radio traffic for real world events.
What other training is most important to you now that you have completed this course?
Critical incident.
Which part(s) of the course was MOST valuable to you. Please explain why.
Inter-departmental relatioships.
Which part(s) of the course was LEAST valuable to you? Please explain why.
Triaging patients.
Please provide any other comments or suggestions you have for improving this course.
None.
What other training is most important to you now that you have completed this course?
None.
Which part(s) of the course was MOST valuable to you. Please explain why.
The 10 simulations. It forced us to put the material into action. It made the material clearer to see it in action.
Which part(s) of the course was LEAST valuable to you? Please explain why.
Nothing was least valuable.
Please provide any other comments or suggestions you have for improving this course.
None known.
What other training is most important to you now that you have completed this course?
More of the same and continued practice.
Which part(s) of the course was MOST valuable to you. Please explain why.
SCENARIOS.
Which part(s) of the course was LEAST valuable to you? Please explain why.
UNK ALL INFORMATION WWAS RELIABLE AND USEFUL.
Please provide any other comments or suggestions you have for improving this course.
CONTINUE TO INCLUDE DISPATCH IN THE COMMUNICATION.
What other training is most important to you now that you have completed this course?
SWAT AND NEGOIATOR COURSE.
Which part(s) of the course was MOST valuable to you. Please explain why.
Student did not leave a written comment.
Which part(s) of the course was LEAST valuable to you? Please explain why.
Student did not leave a written comment.
Please provide any other comments or suggestions you have for improving this course.
Student did not leave a written comment.
What other training is most important to you now that you have completed this course?
Student did not leave a written comment.
Which part(s) of the course was MOST valuable to you. Please explain why.
SCENARIOS.
Which part(s) of the course was LEAST valuable to you? Please explain why.
Na.
Please provide any other comments or suggestions you have for improving this course.
Na.
What other training is most important to you now that you have completed this course?
FURTHER ICS TRAINING.
Which part(s) of the course was MOST valuable to you. Please explain why.
Practical exercises and debriefing what works well and what needs improvement.
Which part(s) of the course was LEAST valuable to you? Please explain why.
Area command section, still helpful; but more applicable to Chief levels.
Please provide any other comments or suggestions you have for improving this course.
Add a day with a real world simulation.
What other training is most important to you now that you have completed this course?
Leadership Institute Courses.
Which part(s) of the course was MOST valuable to you. Please explain why.
It was all very valuable information.
Which part(s) of the course was LEAST valuable to you? Please explain why.
It was all pertant.
Please provide any other comments or suggestions you have for improving this course.
I find the triage postion labeled as such confusing and would like to see that renamed at something different. - such as rescue task force leader, etc.
What other training is most important to you now that you have completed this course?
Anything.
Which part(s) of the course was MOST valuable to you. Please explain why.
The simulation component was very valuable.
Which part(s) of the course was LEAST valuable to you? Please explain why.
None.
Please provide any other comments or suggestions you have for improving this course.
Introduce VR glass and use of joystick to move :).
What other training is most important to you now that you have completed this course?
ICS.
*Evaluations are collected from verified course participants and published without editing. Ratings and comments reflect each participant’s individual experience.