[QUOTE="Chris Timmerman]T.L. You hit the nail on the head. The entire reason I started teaching is I was tired of sitting through classes of mind numbing power point and shooting 20-50rds at a bullseye target and only ever picking my gun up off a table. It is ridiculous to think a person that only ever has that experience is prepared to carry. I feel that an instructor of that style is setting up a student for failure.
Fully agreeing that for most students, the training I give them is all they will ever be exposed to I need to give them real training, not just check the box. This is one of the reasons I structured and market my class as a "Handgun Level 1" class and not a "CCW" class. While HG1 meets and far exceeds the requirements of the state it isn't just another check the box class. On top of 1, 2, and 3 shot drills, multiple target engagement drills, I give blocks of instruction on the draw, reload, and malfunctions. When finished I put them on steel and give them 1 shot from the draw on a timer starting at 7yds moving back to 20. It really opens their eyes when they think they're awesome on paper at 3 yrds, but really struggle to hit a single shot at 12, 15, or more yards. It makes them realize the skills they really need to have to effectively use a handgun to defend themselves.
The other side of the discussion/debate I was having is that a CCW class is purely certification, not a training class. He argued it is the instructors job to make sure they are safe and can hit what they are aiming at. Additional training is the responsibility of the student. I guess that mentality works if you want to run 30 people at a time at 50rds each. I won't teach more than 10 in a class. We definitely see eye to eye on this one.
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I agree with you and T.L.
When I took my CCW course, I believe it was a 12 hour course and after about 6 hours were done with the in class stuff, and spent 2-3 hours on the range qualifying everyone. The last 3 hours our instructor spent teaching us to shoot while moving, some other defensive skills such as shooting from behind cover, creating space between you an an attacker, and some other nifty things that could legitimately save your life should you ever need it.
My mom recently took an 8 hour class, and said the guy pretty much went over the instructional material, answered only basic questions, and only had them shoot about 80-100 rounds down the range from a standing position. Sounded like just the absolute bare minimum to get a CCW. Funny story, my mom came to the range with me and my brother over the weekend and it was like the first time she ever shot a gun.It was clear there wasn't enough time dedicated to firearm handling in the course.
But more on point, I believe the instructors should cram as much learning experiences in the time they have, meeting the minimum requirements are good, but pretty much everyone is there to learn basic self defense should they ever need it. Watching 6 hours of videos and powerpoints won't help with that.