Which part(s) of the course was MOST valuable to you. Please explain why.
Explaining arriving LE responsibilities - most likely where I would be involved.
If an outside training provider has to fly in every time you need active shooter training, readiness stalls. ASIM Basic Train‑the‑Trainer is an 8‑hour in‑person course that builds your internal ASIM trainers so you can train on your schedule, to one standard ASIM playbook across law, fire, and EMS.
Most agencies have a patchwork of active shooter training that changes every time a new outside training provider shows up. ASIM Basic Train-the-Trainer builds a single internal ASIM trainer team so every shift, station, and mutual aid partner learns the same checklist‑based incident management model. Your leaders get a common playbook and clear, defensible training records.
Use one vetted ASIM Basic curriculum and checklist so every officer, firefighter, and medic learns the same incident management process.
Stop waiting on outside calendars. With in‑house trainers, you can run ASIM Basic for new hires, promotions, and refreshers whenever your schedule and staffing allow.
Centralized tests and training records show exactly who has completed ASIM Basic and when — for leadership, unions, grants, and after‑action reviews.
ASIM Basic Train-the-Trainer is a single 8‑hour in‑person course for up to 20 trainer candidates drawn from law enforcement, fire, and EMS. Over the day, your candidates experience ASIM Basic as students, then step into the trainer role to teach modules, run practical exercises, and use the system that tracks who is trained and to what standard.
Trainer candidates take part in the ASIM Basic course, walking through the checklist, case examples, and guided practicals from the student perspective.
Candidates practice teaching key blocks, running Counterstrike™ practicals, giving feedback, and using the LMS to enroll students, score tests, and document training.
ASIM Basic Train-the-Trainer gives your people hands‑on confidence to both run ASIM Basic and answer hard questions from the line. Candidates leave having run scenarios, briefed mixed‑discipline groups, and seen exactly how the checklist performs under pressure.
Law enforcement, fire, and EMS trainer candidates work together so your ASIM trainer team reflects the way you actually respond.
Candidates use the Counterstrike™ Professional Training System to walk through active shooter and hostile event scenarios from first call to last transport.
Each candidate gets reps presenting course content, facilitating practicals, and debriefing exercises — with coaching from NCIER instructors.
We use a no‑fault coaching style that supports both seasoned instructors and first‑time trainers, keeping the focus on learning the ASIM model and how to teach it.
You keep the full ASIM Basic curriculum and tools so you can deliver internal ASIM Basic training as often as needed — with no per‑delivery training fee from NCIER for non‑commercial use.
Bring your future ASIM trainers into one room and leave with a unified team.
Hosts provide the training space, basic AV, and up to 20 trainer candidates from law enforcement, fire, and EMS. NCIER provides the ASIM Basic curriculum, instructor team, 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 Basic Train-the-Trainer is the step that turns ASIM from a one‑time class into a sustained standard across your agency.
15–20 minutes, no obligation. We’ll help you figure out if hosting ASIM Basic Train-the-Trainer makes sense for your agency.
Schedule a Brief CallWhich part(s) of the course was MOST valuable to you. Please explain why.
Explaining arriving LE responsibilities - most likely where I would be involved.
Which part(s) of the course was LEAST valuable to you? Please explain why.
Command post operations - least likely where I would be involved.
Please provide any other comments or suggestions you have for improving this course.
Poker chips on the map became cluttered and confusing after a while - maybe use different markers?.
What other training is most important to you now that you have completed this course?
ICS and tactical medicine.
Which part(s) of the course was MOST valuable to you. Please explain why.
Tourniquet application. It was done in a way that would allow for memorization of application during a high stress incident.
Which part(s) of the course was LEAST valuable to you? Please explain why.
Nomenclature in general. During a stressful situation most people will use basic terminology.
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?
Further response training in situations.
Which part(s) of the course was MOST valuable to you. Please explain why.
Reinforcement of the main goal being stopping the threat and then immediately switching focus to medical in order to reinforce not losing focus on the overall response.
Which part(s) of the course was LEAST valuable to you? Please explain why.
Discussing working with fire and ems when neither of them are trained to work with us. In responding to an active shooter incident in Gloucester county, it will be police response only.
Please provide any other comments or suggestions you have for improving this course.
The table top exercises focus too much on assigning tasks and getting resources and not enough on real life. At no point should you be waiting for 25 officers to arrive on scene to begin tending to the wounded and moving them.
What other training is most important to you now that you have completed this course?
Collaborative training with fire and ems is necessary before implementing them into our plans.
Which part(s) of the course was MOST valuable to you. Please explain why.
The practical exercises were best because it showed how other officers thought and how we could work together to manage an incident.
Which part(s) of the course was LEAST valuable to you? Please explain why.
The tourniquet practice because I do that often anyways.
Please provide any other comments or suggestions you have for improving this course.
I don't necessarily agree with the amount of security needed compared to rescue components after the shooter is already down. I understand why it is suggested but then it is also said you're still playing the odds that it is a lone gunman, so I would still be using more resources for rescue.
What other training is most important to you now that you have completed this course?
I would like more practical and hands on active shooter response, room clearing, etc.
Which part(s) of the course was MOST valuable to you. Please explain why.
Understanding steps, to get overall picture of scene.
Which part(s) of the course was LEAST valuable to you? Please explain why.
I think everything is just as important.
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?
More ASIM.
Which part(s) of the course was MOST valuable to you. Please explain why.
Everything.
Which part(s) of the course was LEAST valuable to you? Please explain why.
Nothing.
Please provide any other comments or suggestions you have for improving this course.
Great course.
What other training is most important to you now that you have completed this course?
Cqb.
Which part(s) of the course was MOST valuable to you. Please explain why.
Learning the larger picture.
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?
Knowing everyone’s role.
Which part(s) of the course was MOST valuable to you. Please explain why.
Scenarios to see different roles.
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.
Great course.
What other training is most important to you now that you have completed this course?
CQB.
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.
Instruction’s engaging the class.
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.
None.
What other training is most important to you now that you have completed this course?
Training with ems and fire.
*Evaluations are collected from verified course participants and published without editing. Ratings and comments reflect each participant’s individual experience.