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College
Credit
Registration Form
University of Utah Credit for Wilderness Risk Management
Conference Registration Form: Click
Here (pdf)
Syllabus
PRT-5960-70 Wilderness Risk Management Course
Instructor: Kirk L. Nichols, kirk.nichols@health.utah.edu
U.S. Mail Address:
250 S. 1850 E. Rom 200
Salt Lake City, Utah 84112
Grade Scale: Credit/No Credit
All paperwork (documentation of attendance and Action Plan)
is due on the second Friday after the end of the conference.
E-mail delivery preferred.
Credit Requirements:
Attendance Option 1, 2 hrs. PRT 5960-70
credit: attendance of all session periods and evening presentations
of the Wilderness Risk Management Conference (documentation
required) (19 hrs of attendance) plus a 7-10 page, typed
(word processed) Action Plan (described below) which will
be accepted only during the two weeks following the close
of conference (e-mail to kirk.nichols@health.utah.edu ).
In addition to the attendance requirements, a score of 70%
(compared to expectations of an entering graduate student)
on the written Action Plan, or higher, is required for credit.
Attendance Option 2, 2 hrs. PRT 5960-70
credit: attendance of all session periods and evening presentations
of the Wilderness Risk Management Conference (documentation
required) (19 hrs of attendance) plus full attendance at
the All Day Pre-Conference Workshop (8 hrs of attendance)
plus a 3-5 page, typed (word processed) Action Plan (described
below) which will be accepted only during the two weeks
following the close of conference (e-mail to kirk.nichols@health.utah.edu
). In addition to the attendance requirements, a score of
70% (compared to expectations of an entering graduate student)
on the written Action Plan, or higher, is required for credit.
Attendance Option 3, 2 hrs. PRT 5960-70
credit: attendance of all session periods and evening presentations
of the Wilderness Risk Management Conference (documentation
required) (19 hrs of attendance) plus full attendance at
the Half Day Pre-Conference Workshop (4 hrs of attendance)
plus a 6-8 page, typed (word processed) Action Plan (described
below) which will be accepted only during the two weeks
following the close of conference (e-mail to kirk.nichols@health.utah.edu
). In addition to the attendance requirements, a score of
70% (compared to expectations of an entering graduate student)
on the written Action Plan, or higher, is required for credit.
Course description:
The Wilderness Risk Management Course will educate wilderness
practitioners on risk management and practical safety skills,
share field and administrative techniques and raise the
overall standards in the wilderness adventure industry.
The conference is sponsored by the Wilderness Risk Manger’s
Committee, a national consortium of outdoor schools, guide
services, organizations and land managers, who are working
towards better clarification, understanding and management
of risks in the wilderness.
Students will design their own learning experience by
selecting from a broad variety of class sessions. The complete
pre-conference and conference sessions total 27 hours of
instruction. Student will design the number of hours attended
and written paper details to fit their needs as described
above in the three attendance options. Past class session
titles have included: Crisis Management, Legal Issues, Working
with the Media, The Psychology and Sociology of Judgment
for Outdoor Leaders, Critical Incident Stress Management
for Outdoor Programs, Topic for University and Outdoor Programs,
Assessing Risk When Developing New Programs, Analyzing Accidents,
Staffing Issues, Safeguarding Your Insurance, Search and
Rescue for Outdoor Leaders, Volunteer Leaders, plus much
more.
Action Plan Goals:
The completed plan will provide a foundation, motivation,
and timeline for integrating information from the Wilderness
Risk Management Conference into a program of your interest.
Action Plan Requirements:
Depending upon the attendance option chosen, this plan will
require between 3 and 10 pages of word-processed, one inch
margins, 11 or 12 font, double-spaced typing. Tables may
or may not be appropriate for some portions of the Action
Plan. You must write in full sentences using proper English
grammar.
For all options chosen, each of the numbered steps below
must be addressed. Papers using the longer paper requirements
will require more detailed planning per step, or the paper
will be applied to several risk management targets. If you
are working for or volunteering for an organization, please
work with your administrators on this project. If you are
a student and your school has an outdoor program of some
type, see if they will work with you on this paper. Questions
involving the appropriateness of this assignment and your
work or school situation must be resolved before this course
begins so an alternative written assignment can be designed
in advance.
WRITTEN ACTION PLAN STEPS:
- Organization Information:
- Describe your organization (public school, non-profit
education, therapeutic, commercial guiding, etc.),
your outdoor settings, and course or activity type,
duration, difficulties, etc.
- Describe your organizational hierarchy.
- Describe your organization’s strengths and
weaknesses in the areas of wilderness risk management.
- Target a Risk Management Weakness:
(longer papers may have more than one objective, however,
take each target objective sequentially through the following
steps and then write through the steps for the next objective
and so on)
Choose an area of risk management that you can affect
within your organization (e.g. instructor training, field
activity protocols, behavior management protocols, venue
choices, hazard assessment, hiring practices, legal paperwork,
advertising brochure descriptions, evacuation plans, etc.)
- State a specific objective that you will accomplish.
- Write out the steps you think will be needed to
accomplish each objective (e.g. who to meet with,
what to discuss, information gathering and sources,
etc. leading to final objective.)
- Estimate a time table (set specific calendar dates)
for each of the steps and set an estimated date for
the final implementation of the objective.
- Estimate a budget for implementation.
- Adversities
- Describe the main blocks to developing and implementing
your improvements in your organization’s wilderness
risk management plan. Thinking about these in advance
will allow you to plan and find allies for your implementation.
- For each block-to-progress, write a solution or
approach to overcoming the potential difficulty.
- Estimate a time table for each of the solutions
for overcoming the potential difficulty.
- Write out an on-going evaluation plan which includes
dates and “landmarks” for accomplishing
segments of your plan. Passing “landmarks”
is great for your morale.
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