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- May 1991
-
-
- HONOLULU'S STRIPES:
- TRAINING FOR SERGEANTS
-
- By
-
- Robert D. Prasser
- Captain
- Honolulu, Hawaii, Police Department
-
-
- In today's legal climate, it is imperative that police
- sergeants be prepared not only to face the challenges of
- crime in their districts but also to manage their personnel
- more effectively. All too often, newly promoted sergeants
- receive only an orientation and a review of departmental
- regulations before they are placed in their new assignments
- to either "sink or swim." (1) In police departments throughout
- the country, this is often wryly referred to as "Holy Ghost"
- training--somehow they will get the job done with minimum damage
- to the department and few lawsuits.
-
- While not discounting divine intervention, the Honolulu,
- Hawaii, Police Department realized that recently appointed
- sergeants require additional training to rise to an increased
- level of professionalism, in view of today's ever-litigious
- society. Department officials recognized that sergeants on
- today's police forces need basic skills in management and
- supervision, counseling, public relations, and other areas that
- were previously delegated to mid-level managers and above. (2)
- With these issues in mind, they developed a new training program
- for sergeants. This article discusses how that training
- program--STRIPES (Supervisory Training Regimen In the
- Preparation and Education of Sergeants)--was developed and
- implemented.
-
- TRAINING NEEDS ASSESSMENT
-
- The first step in developing the new program was to form a
- committee of top supervisors and managers from various divisions
- within the department to assess the needs of a sergeant training
- program. This committee had a "blank slate" to plan a program
- that would produce highly trained sergeants, who were recently
- promoted to that rank, and eliminate those officers who were
- ill-suited for the position.
-
- After reviewing the existing sergeants training program,
- committee members devised a survey to determine current training
- needs. This survey, which was sent to all executive and
- mid-management personnel, requested feedback on potential topics
- to be included in the program, as well as any other relevant
- comments or ideas. The committee members then formulated
- recommendations and goals, developed specific class titles and
- practical exercise concepts, and estimated the number of hours
- needed for each area of training.
-
- In their recommendations to the chief, the committee
- proposed that the new program:
-
- * Provide basic information and develop skills needed by
- sergeants to become effective supervisors
-
- * Demonstrate a commitment by the department to this type
- of training
-
- * Require a serious commitment from the trainees
-
- The committee also recommended that the number of sergeants
- promoted at any one time be kept to a manageable number.
- Although some of the available classrooms seat 60 officers, the
- committee recommended that, for learning purposes, classes be
- limited to 30 officers.
-
- THE STRIPES PROGRAM
-
- The STRIPES Program lasts approximately 20 days and
- includes a variety of training tools that both challenge and
- stimulate the trainees, including classroom instruction and
- lectures, mock scenarios, and written examinations. In order to
- make the program as professional as possible, instructors from
- within the department who are expert in particular fields
- augment the existing training staff.
-
- STRIPES is significantly different from the previous
- training program. The STRIPES curriculum includes eight areas
- of concentration.
-
- Officers are graded on a pass/fail basis, with a penalty of
- demotion for failing the program. This system not only
- motivates the officers to learn but also identifies those
- officers who should be removed from the program because they
- have not mastered fundamental supervisory skills.
-
- The program is designed to help sergeants succeed. There
- are two comprehensive exams given throughout the training that
- provide a foundation for each officer's evaluation. However, in
- addition to the exams, performance during practical exercises is
- also considered. The decision to pass or fail officers is based
- on their overall performance.
-
- In the past, most sergeant training was done in the
- classroom. However, because police officers tend to be
- practical, task-oriented individuals who need more than
- classroom lectures to keep their interest, practical exercises,
- such as mock scenarios, were incorporated into the STRIPES
- Program.
-
- MOCK SCENARIOS
-
- Mock scenarios are highly structured exercises that expose
- the officers to a variety of difficult situations that require
- them to use their acquired skills and knowledge, as well as
- their experience, in order to resolve the incident successfully.
- For example, in one mock scenario, sergeants are required to
- manage their personnel and resources at a difficult crime scene,
- such as a felony assault with arrests at a crowded bar.
- Participants in the scenario are given specific instructions on
- how to perform, and the sergeant trainees must quickly develop
- an understanding of how to deal with difficult people, including
- witnesses, the media, and even department personnel. Other mock
- scenarios might include counseling an employee for chronic
- absenteeism, marginal performance, or substance abuse, or
- handling an internal affairs investigation that deals with
- citizen complaints.
-
- Mock scenarios are also used to complement classroom
- lectures. For example, in conjunction with the classroom
- lecture on disciplinary procedures, officers conduct a mock
- internal investigation that requires a considerable time
- commitment, possibly even some of the officers' off-duty
- time. This exercise is extremely valuable to newly promoted
- sergeants because it allows them to assemble a complex,
- often-litigated report before they are required to complete
- such an investigation in the field.
-
- All mock scenarios take place in a realistic setting in a
- mock crime scene building. A panel of evaluators with expertise
- in various areas, such as homicide or internal affairs
- investigations, observes the scenarios behind one-way glass. The
- exercises are graded, and the results are placed in each
- officer's portfolio for feedback and documentation purposes.
-
- Every effort has been made to make the STRIPES Program as
- complete and effective as possible. However, important to every
- program is an evaluation phase that provides valuable feedback
- from its participants.
-
- PROGRAM EVALUATION
-
- To determine whether the goals of the training program are
- being met, the training staff developed an extensive evaluation
- form to be completed by the sergeants in the STRIPES Program.
- This 16-page evaluation form lists each course in the
- curriculum, with a separate evaluation for each instructor.
- This allows the training staff to isolate problems with either
- courses or instructors and also allows them to evaluate the
- overall effectiveness of the program.
-
- The evaluation form is given to the sergeants at the
- beginning of the training so they can record their comments and
- ideas as the course progresses. This way, sergeants have
- adequate time to make written comments while their assessments
- of both the course content and instructors are fresh. Because
- they are not under time constraints to complete the evaluations,
- they are more likely to give specific written suggestions and
- comments for improvement.
-
- To supplement the evaluation of the newly promoted
- sergeants, the training staff, after each graduating class, also
- conducts a self-critique concerning the effectiveness of the
- program. The staff uses the sergeants' evaluations to generate
- discussion, and unsolicited suggestions and comments from the
- various field commanders are also discussed at this time.
-
- PROGRAM REVISIONS
-
- In order to keep the program both dynamic and credible, all
- courses are subject to change, deletion, or modification when
- feedback indicates that a change is needed. This was the case
- when the field training phase was removed from the program.
- Initially, the STRIPES Program included field training in both
- patrol and desk assignments. This phase of the training allowed
- newly promoted sergeants to train alongside experienced ones in
- order to gain valuable insights and training in their new
- positions. In theory, this concept was fine. However, feedback
- indicated that the actual practice was falling far short of the
- concept.
-
- To begin, the time allocated to desk and field training was
- too limited to allow the sergeants to gain any real insight into
- their new positions. In addition, it was impossible, in such a
- short time span, for the sergeants to develop any kind of
- supervisory rapport with the officers temporarily working for
- them.
-
- Another problem that surfaced in the field training phase
- was the diversity of assignments that sergeants have after
- completing the program. In the Honolulu Police Department, the
- rank of sergeant is the same as detective. Therefore, newly
- promoted sergeants are assigned to either field sergeant or
- detective slots. To further complicate the issue, these
- sergeants or detectives are assigned to a number of different
- positions, such as desk or field assignments, patrol or
- administrative assignments, and uniform or plainclothes
- assignments.
-
- Evaluations and critiques of both sergeants and their
- counterparts in the field indicated that the field training was
- too generic and too short to be of real value. Therefore, this
- phase of the training was eliminated. Instead, sergeants now
- receive on-the-job training in their specific assignments.
- Feedback from the evaluation phases of each class has resulted
- in other changes being made to the program. The STRIPES
- curriculum has also undergone several revisions since the
- training committee made its initial recommendations to the
- chief.
-
- The courses originally recommended by the training
- committee formed the curriculum for the first STRIPES class.
- The initial curriculum included over 180 hours of training.
- With each subsequent class, however, the feedback from both the
- sergeants and the training staff has resulted in curriculum
- changes, in an attempt to meet the needs of both the trainees
- and the department.
-
- The current STRIPES curriculum includes 136 hours of
- training. Many of the courses now offered are a direct result
- of the feedback received from previous classes. Other courses
- are the result of recommendations made by the training staff, as
- well as those made by officers in the field.
-
- CONCLUSION
-
- The STRIPES Program meets the initial training goals of the
- Honolulu Police Department. To date, no sergeants have failed
- to complete the training. Department officials believe that the
- pass/fail format of the training has contributed greatly to the
- success of the program in that it forces the sergeant to meet
- the standards of the department or face the possibility of
- demotion. Other than in recruit training, most departments
- continue to hold inservice classes without establishing a
- measurable standard to determine the training's effectiveness.
- The STRIPES Program eliminates this problem by using graded
- exercises and exams.
-
- In all probability, a newly promoted sergeant will, at some
- point, fail to complete the training and be demoted to officer
- status again. (3) When this happens, there will be the
- potential for a legal challenge to the department. However, if
- officers are retained at ranks for which they are unqualified,
- everyone suffers. (4) It calls into question the competence and
- integrity of the department as a whole. This, in turn, lowers
- morale within the department and diminishes community confidence
- and trust in the police.
-
- The curriculum of the STRIPES Program will inevitably go
- through further revisions, changes, and improvements. By
- remaining flexible, however, and continually updating the
- curriculum as the need arises, the primary goal will be met--to
- prepare newly promoted sergeants for the challenges that await
- them.
-
-
- FOOTNOTES
-
- (1) K. Culbertson and M. Thompson, "An Analysis of Supervisory
- Training Needs," Training and Development Journal, February
- 1980, p. 62.
-
- (2) Doug Goodgame, "Training Priorities for First Line
- Supervisors in Municipal Law Enforcement: A Contrast of
- Opinion," Journal of Police Science and Administration, vol. 6,
- No.2, June 1978, p. 2.
-
- (3) Thomas Paglia, "Field Training for Supervisors--The Next
- Step," Field Training Quarterly, Fourth Quarter 1987, p. 10.
-
- (4) William J. Bopp, Police Personnel Administration, 2d. ed.
- (Boston, MA: Allyn and Bacon, 1980), p. 135.