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National Training and Education System

National Training and Education System . April 16, 2013.

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National Training and Education System

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  1. National Training and Education System April 16, 2013

  2. The National Training and Education System (NTES) will consist of policies, processes, and tools through which the requirements for homeland security training and education will drive the supply of training and education courses offered to the Whole Community Overview 2

  3. Background • Pursuant to Presidential Policy Directive 8, the National Preparedness System (2011) called for the creation of the NTES “to enable the Whole Community to access training and education in support of preparedness” • Under the Post Katrina Emergency Management Reform Act, 6 USC §748, “the [FEMA] Administrator, in coordination with the heads of appropriate Federal agencies, the National Council on Disability, and the National Advisory Council, carries out a national training program…” • As with the National Exercise Program (NEP), NTES services the Whole Community, including Federal, state, local, tribal, and territorial (SLTT) governments

  4. Core Functions of NTES • Establish Training and Education Policy • Right Course: Perform requirements analysis to identify the required courses for NTES funding • Right Student: Institute a process to ensure that the correct selection of students will have access to NTES-funded programming Right Student in the Right Course • Establish and Foster an Integrated Homeland Security Training and Exercise Community of Practice

  5. National Training and Education System Status Update • National Training and Education System (NTES) called for in PPD-8/NPS and a “National Training Program” called for under PKEMRA • Initial draft NTES document approved by FEMA leadership was shared with Interagency through the PPD-8 working group • By consolidating existing FEMA technology and administrative resources, all principal requirements to operate NTES should be met. Partnerships with other entities, both inside and outside of FEMA/DHS (e.g. DHS S&T analytical support), could dramatically reduce implementation timelines • We have socialized NTES concept with key Whole Community (WC) partners including academics and S/L/T/T, and received feedback with wide acceptance and support (began 1/2012)

  6. FEMA “AS IS” Environment Analysis completed of the re-programmable funding associated with specialized courses provided by CDP, EMI, and NTED: • In FY12, Training Covered All Core Capabilities • 583 distinct courses delivered across CDP, NTED and EMI • Verified opportunity for validating “Right Student, Right Course” • Law Enforcement personnel accounted for 45% of CDP and NTED course completions • Awareness courses continue to account for the highest proportion of course completions in FY12 • FY03-FY12, CHDS, CDP, and NTED training and education course completions were generally proportional to the average population within a given U.S. state/territory • No mechanism to validate/corroborate training made available is most effective use of limited NTES funding

  7. Problem Statement – “WHY NTES?” • Provision of T&E is based on the training providers and/or the individual or organizational “wants” instead of national requirements or core capability needs identified in a risk-centric, capability based approach resulting in an open course catalog this is not mapped to core capabilities • No risk-centric, capability-based application process exists to match the “right student” to the “right course” • Interagency and FEMA resourcing is variable/not equitable and programming decisions are not grounded in risk or aimed specifically at building and sustaining core capabilities • Need for prioritization between NTES funded programing focused on complex and unique programming that builds more progressive competency (e.g., ICS-400, live agent training, etc.,) and more basic (e.g., awareness training that can be delivered locally), that would allow NTES to focus on “higher value”/payoff core capability training and education requirements

  8. Key Functions of the National Training Education System 1 2 3

  9. Requirements Drive Resource Allocation 1 NTES Outputs Through the NTES, FEMA and its partners will continually collect and analyze training and education requirementsfrom across the Whole Community and modify programming to address those requirements. Examine a broad range of potential requirementssources, including: • Capability Estimations and shortfall analyses • State Preparedness Reports • Threat and Hazard Identification and Risk Assessments (THIRA) • Participant feedback and post-exercise/incident assessment tools • Course enrollment data • Organizational/employer needs

  10. Linking Capabilities, Competencies, and Modules 1 • Collaborating with training partners and experts from the homeland security domains: • Identify the competencies that support each core capability • Identify the specific KSAs that build the competencies within each domain • Identify and develop the modules that support development of those KSAs and competencies and where there are shortfalls and redundancies in current course offerings • Assign “values” to the different modules, to determine the amount competency that each course provide and allow for the most efficient use of resources Successful mapping will allow for more precision in the allocation of resources to specific modules to maximize the competency gained/course Prioritize Shortfalls

  11. Right Courses for the Right Students 1 The NTES processes will maximize the efficiency of T&E resource allocation, increasing the competency gained per course Competency/Course 2013 Target: Training that focuses on requisite competencies to build and sustain relevant capabilities Target State NTES Current State Right Student Emphasis starting in 2001: Training for everyone on a broad array of subjects to raise awareness and performance without the boundaries now provided by the core capabilities Cost/Course

  12. Creates and Fosters a Homeland Security T&E Community 2 • NTES processes provide and encourage an exchange of information between training and education providers and academics in order to enhance competencies • NTES benefits the Whole T&E Community not just traditional Training and Education providers

  13. Creates and Fosters a Homeland Security T&E Community (cont’d) 2 The NTES is designed to address current shortfalls in the development and provision of homeland security T&E by building and strengthening a truly integrated community of practice • No common framework for attaining academic degrees based on current course work • NTES: facilitates development of academic articulation agreements that enable professionals to attain credits and transfer them efficiently • No means for T&E providers and faculty to receive the latest USG policy and guidance • NTES: implement mechanisms to communicate new/changes in policy and other critical information to the stakeholders who need it, so that trainers/educators remain aligned to national priorities • Professionals, from the volunteer firefighter to the epidemiologist to the police officer, lack a common set of homeland security foundational knowledge • NTES: develop and promote homeland security fundamentals for use in academics and training centers from all disciplines, to build baseline knowledge and a mutual understanding of roles and responsibilities within the enterprise

  14. Creates and Fosters a Homeland Security T&E Community (cont’d) 2 • No process by which institutions can establish pedagogic and exercise domain research agenda • NTES: establish formal mechanism for homeland security professionals to transmit their pedagogic and exercise research and development needs • T&E providers and instructors have no common means to list available courses and learn about courses offered by others • NTES: establish a universal catalogue capability open to all providers that allows professionals to search for/find courses of interest that meet their criteria/needs • No common mechanism for professionals to provide real-time or immediate, post-event feedback from training, exercises, and incidents • NTES: develop a capability for professionals to both submit feedback on T&E needs/shortfalls from events and receive an automated-customized training recommendation in support of their Individual Development Plan • No national-level means for enabling course developers to share course content with peers • NTES: Establish processes and tools to allow sharing, use, and re-use of course content and materials

  15. Creates and Fosters a Homeland Security T&E Community (cont’d) 2 • No common platform for instructors to share their best practices and lessons learned • NTES: fosters sharing of pedagogical best practices to promote innovation within the community • No formal means for professionals to provide their real-time training requirements in response to an event and for providers to deliver that training quickly and easily • NTES: implement ways to gather real-time training requirements and delivers just in time training that addresses those requirements, to support professionals during real-world operations • Newly elected and appointed officials may not have access to formal T&E to support incident management and cross-functional coordination • NTES: direct promotion of multi-disciplinary, inter-jurisdictional T&E that support mutual understanding, authorities, operational coordination, and joint decision-making among senior leadership • No means for a professional to view and understand their qualifications and experiences • NTES: develop a single standardized record to enable professionals, T&E institutions, and employers to have a common understanding of an individual’s education, training, exercises, and real-world experiences

  16. Integrate T&E Processes and Systems 3 • FEMA will integrate and develop the process and systems with integrated tools that enable all aspects of the NTES: • Facilitate the collection and analysis of the T&E requirements • Encourage community collaboration and innovation; for example: • Local organizations will be able to post their own training and personnel needs and best practices • The community can then be invited to comment or suggest improvements • Provide an enterprise platform for end-users to • Create personal development plans • Access a universal open catalogue, • Receive course recommendations, • Establish a standardized record of training, education and experience

  17. NTES Milestones • Gain formal agreement on NTES system document • Continue mapping courses to core capabilities • Begin to map competencies to core capabilities • Acquire Data for Training Requirements analysis • Decompose courses into modules • Continue ongoing efforts of working group of NPD representatives to oversee implementation activities

  18. Summary The NTES is a fundamental and necessary transformation in the development and delivery of homeland security training and education • Resourcing and accessing training and education programming based on requirements, not simply “wants” • Allocation of training and education resources based on analysis of requirements and prioritized core capability needs and shortfalls • Matches the right students to the right courses, increasing the efficiency of training delivery and maximizing the competency gained per dollar spent • Connects instructors and stakeholders to foster information sharing and common practices • Provides a host of tools and technologies to improve training and education planning, delivery, and outcomes • NTES will create/support a T&E integrated community of practice based on sharing common practices, guidance and coordinated efforts

  19. Background Information

  20. Alignment to the National Preparedness System (NPS) The NPS Components • Supports the “Building and Sustaining Capabilities” component of the NPS • Balances T&E resources for priority core capability shortfalls and sustaining all core capabilities • Maps competencies and programming to core capabilities • Leverages existing tools, reports, and processes of the NPS, including: • Threat and Hazard Identification and Risk Assessment (THIRA) • Capability Estimation (CE) • Strategic National Risk Assessment (SNRA) • Preparedness Grants Program • National Preparedness Report (NPR) and State Preparedness Reports (SPR)

  21. End of presentation

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