Training Preview—when I was the commander of the FTO program in my prior department, I immediately found out that it was beneficial for the recruits to have a training session about the training program. Due to the academy scheduling, there would always be a day that the department would have the recruits prior to graduation. This was the day to present the overview to the FTO program.
I was shocked to discover that some departments never do this. In most agencies, recruits go straight from the steps of the graduation stage to the FTO’s car without a briefing; talk about culture shock. Even the military gives you a briefing to prepare from one training station to the other.
FTO Program 101—At the start of my field training prep program, each recruit received a field training recruit manual. This had a complete guide to the program. It also had explanations of all the terms, abbreviations, and acronyms that we would be using in the FTO program and a projected schedule of all the required phases and boards they had to complete.
They were also told what the expectations of them would be in each week and phase, what they would be required to do to progress to the next phase, and how each week and phase would have a higher degree of difficulty and more responsibilities.
The prep manual included samples of the grading, rating, and daily observation report (DOR) sheets that their FTOs would use to report on their progress. It also contained a bunch of other forms, including a sample of the Explained, Demonstrated, and Performed (EDP) sheet that their FTO would use to document their skills.