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News
NICC to Offer New Firefighting Program
Posted 17 August 2008
Now area firefighters will have the
paper to prove it. Northeast Iowa Community College is offering a
new Associate in Applied Science (AAS)-Firefighting Specialist program
this fall at both its Calmar and Peosta campuses.
The program offers area firefighters an opportunity to earn academic
credentials. Fire department officials and NICC staff have worked
collaboratively to offer a degree program at the college ever since the
completion of the Dubuque County Emergency Responder Training Facility
in 2006.
The new Firefighting Specialist degree takes a hands-on
approach to the curriculum, unlike the theory-based approach of the
current NICC Associate in Arts-Fire Science program. There are at least
three major advantages the specialist program offers students and area
fire departments, according to Dan Neenan, manager of the National
Education Center for Agricultural Safety
(NECAS) at the Peosta campus: Many of the classes in the program
are free, the classes are taught at the local fire department facility
in area towns, and firefighters young and old can gain life skills
credit depending on their firefighting experience. Neenan is one of the
coordinators who developed the program.
NICC's continuing education department offers the courses
at each local fire department free of charge, Neenan said. State funds
provide financial support for classroom instruction and field training.
Courses in the program include Firefighting I and II, Hazardous
Materials, Driver Operator and others. Students will be given 33
credits for their required and elective courses. In addition, students
must complete 31 general education credits.
For the general education credit requirements, students may opt to take
the courses online to avoid the gas and transportation costs of
studying on campus.
The electives cover a variety of specialized learning, including
courses in arson detection, advanced officer training and a
NECAS-taught option, Technical Ag Rescue. The NECAS course teaches
students farm rescue operations, such as those involved in tractor
rollover accidents or combine/auger extrication situations.
Fire departments view NICC's degree as an opportunity to
give back to the many volunteers who contribute their effort and energy
to the community, 24 hours a day, seven days a week. "It's a 'win-win'
situation," said Neenan. "This degree is affordable and a chance for
volunteers to earn a college degree."
This is an accredited program by the Iowa Department of
Education. To learn more about any of NICC's programs, visit http://www.nicc.edu/programs
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