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Comprehensive and easy to use

The online course was clear, easy to use and good that you could stop and come back to it, I really liked the secret camera and real life examples, they really had an impact on human behaviour around fire and will enable me to be more confident in my role.

Overall good content

Overall good content, good use of multi-media, and very good knowledge-check MCQs. Learning outcomes were achieved for me. I felt it could have been made shorter without losing any key learning points, which would have made it more effective as a training session for corporate organisations (i.e. I found it useful, but thought it took more of my time than it needed to). Some of the sections seem slightly repetitive and some could definitely have been edited more without losing anything (e.g. the film of the people responding to a fire alarm and their testimonials).

Very informative

I enjoyed this course and learnt a few new points

Excellent

This user gave this course a rating of 5/5 stars

Excellent Refresher

A long but useful course, providing a helpful refresher and lots of useful information.

Good training on the whole

A bit long winded, could have been a lot shorter and concise, but a good overview of the expectations of a Fire Warden.

Interesting

A brilliant, insight into how people react in emergency. Interesting to review how things have changed since I last did the training

Very good.

I've done similar courses before. I liked the part where they showed people's reactions to fire alarms. Shows the importance of this kind of training. Always good to have real examples of fires as well. Helpful to have practical follow-up on use of extinguishers. This is something I've done before.

I found it helpful and easy to follow.

This user gave this course a rating of 5/5 stars

Thorough but not too heavy to digest.

The course covered all the essentials. At the end I felt I'd learned new things and been reminded of things I'd forgotten. The 'human nature' films (fire alarm, and the shop) were interesting and are likely to be the things I remember most. In the test, I doubt I would have got the score I did if I hadn't made notes during the training. I've done iHasco sessions before so I knew you would ask me something obscure. In this training it's sensible to test us about procedures and fire types, but is it really necessary to know the exact number of schools per week that are victim to arson, and to be marked down if you didn't know it was 16? Restrict the test to practical aspects.