Difference between revisions of "Simulation-Based Training"
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#'''Conduct''': The actual conduct of the exercise activity consists of initiating and maintaining the exercice by simulating, monitoring, controling and facilitating activities to ensure that the exercise remains within the design parameters. It also involves documentation of the participants'activities and termination of the exercise. | #'''Conduct''': The actual conduct of the exercise activity consists of initiating and maintaining the exercice by simulating, monitoring, controling and facilitating activities to ensure that the exercise remains within the design parameters. It also involves documentation of the participants'activities and termination of the exercise. | ||
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#'''Review''': The review phase consists of collecting and analising data, documenting findings and recommendations for improvement. and ensuring information is fed back to management or people concerned. As the activity plan is revised and updated, the exercise programme is similarly adjusted to take into account the lessons learned from prior exercises. | #'''Review''': The review phase consists of collecting and analising data, documenting findings and recommendations for improvement. and ensuring information is fed back to management or people concerned. As the activity plan is revised and updated, the exercise programme is similarly adjusted to take into account the lessons learned from prior exercises. | ||
#*Collect data | #*Collect data |
Revision as of 14:31, 23 March 2009
SIMULATION-BASED TRAINING |
An instructional methodology in which the trainees, through simulations or situation scenario, can learn by practising skills taught and experiencing mistakes before interacting in the real world. This methodology is typically goal oriented and focus learners on specific facts, concepts or application of reality. For example, simulation exercises are often designed to evaluate a wide range of contingency plans and to train the personnel involved.
Simulation-based training is often associated with full replicas of real equipment - often with computer systems, motion systems, and high-quality graphics. This is not the case, as simulation-based learning in broadest sense can include:
of information and response strategies. A simple and early form of tabletop exercise would be a response team going through the contingency plan, page by page, testing each other’s activities in response to an imaginary situation. A more complex tabletop exercise might involve several groups, including outside parties, playing their roles. For the acquisition of critical assessment and management skills, simulation-based training give more results than problem-based learning. The key components of simulation-based training are as follows:
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Implementing a Simulation-Based Training |
General Guidelines
[2]. Guiding principlesWhen designing and conducting exercises, there are certain guiding principles that should be observed:
Planning Process Step by StepExercice planning consists of four separate activities - design, develop, conduct and review - that collectively describe the process for creating and running realistic and successul exercises. The process is defined as follows:
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References
- ↑ Wikipedia (21 January 2009), www.rpd.co.uk(21 January 2009), www.ipieca.org(21 January 2009)
- ↑ www.ingentaconnect.org (21 January 2009),