Explain the differences between the police academy and field training and why it is important for officers to have both types of training

What will be an ideal response?


• Police academy - The police academy, run by either the state or a police agency, provides recruits with a controlled, militarized environment in which they receive their introduction to the world of the police officer. They are taught the laws of search, seizure, arrest, and interrogation; how and when to use weapons; the procedures of securing a crime scene and interviewing witnesses; first aid; self-defense
• Field training - The segment of a police recruit's training in which he or she is removed from the classroom and placed on the beat, under the supervision of a senior officer. The goal of field training is to help rookies apply the concepts they have learned in the academy "to the streets," with the FTO playing a supervisory role to make sure that nothing goes awry.
• According to many, the academy introduces recruits to the formal rules of police work, but field training gives the rookies their first taste of the informal rules. This is important because what is learned in the classroom is not always what an officer will experience on the street in person.

Criminal Justice

You might also like to view...

The prosecution may be required to disclose the identity of ___________ if that person was an active participant in the offense for which the defendant is being prosecuted

a. the victim b. a witness c. a confidential informant d. none of these

Criminal Justice

Mexican organized crime is understood against a backdrop of:

a. Patron-client relationships b. Political patronage c. Endemic corruption d. All of these

Criminal Justice

Most self-report studies tend to focus on juvenile offending

Indicate whether the statement is true or false

Criminal Justice

Who can be impeached at trial?

a. anyone who takes the witness stand b. any witness except the defendant c. only witnesses who commit perjury d. impeachment is not done during trial.

Criminal Justice