EVALS Makes Folsom Home

EVALS has placed its roots in the City of Folsom, embroidered with rich history dating back to the Gold Rush, first railroads, and early transmission of electricity. This vibrant community filled with an array of activities has helped EVALS attract talented people to join its team. With a multitude of high tech firms setting up primary or secondary locations, EVALS has joined the ranks of Intel, Micron Technology, Meridian Systems, and L-3 Communications, in the Folsom area.

The Folsom Historic District offers great restaurants, bakeries, pubs, antique shops, and events, that adds another layer of energy and enjoyment to an already energized team. A perfect example of this dates back to our holiday party that concluded with ice skating in the pouring rain. Although, not ideal conditions, it was still a great opportunity for our families and friends to revel in each others company.

Our location has been instrumental in moving forward with strategic partnerships with other businesses and clients alike, forging bonds with SMUD, Wolfpack Solutions, Apple, GoPro, and many more. EVALS is an organization that is cloud based with members and partners all over the world, but finds itself thriving in the community of Folsom.

www.historicfolsom.org

www.folsom.ca.us

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EVALS visits APPLE

After returning from three days on the road visiting Apple stores in Salt Lake City, Rancho Cucamonga, and Newport Beach, EVALS  could not be more excited about the future of technology and the benefits a mobile workforce will realize by taking advantage of these advancements.

By working closely with Apple, our partner, Wolfpack Solutions, has been able to identify significant improvements in effectiveness and efficiency for Public Safety. When properly implemented, iOS can help every division in the Fire Service and Law Enforcement.

Matt Cole speaks to guests at Apple Rancho Cucamonga

EVALS was honored to sit at the table with Wolfpack solutions and Tablet Command to share our product features and benefits. Although Salt Lake City and Southern California are 700 miles apart, fire agencies in these areas share pain points and stand side by side in the mission to find ways to make training better.

EVALS feels very fortunate to have regional fire service leaders, the most innovating tech company (Apple), and amazing partners collaborating with us and discussing what collectively can be accomplished by working together.

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EVALS would like to thank all involved parties for the opportunity, passion, and commitment to finding successful solutions for Public Safety.

 

Sierra College Use Case – Increasing Student Success

The following Use Case is written by  Sierra College Fire Instructor, Matt Jewett

Increasing Student Success:
Firefighter 1 academies are both mentally and physically stressful on students. Because of this stressful paramilitary learning environment, most academies have an attrition rate of between 16-20 percent. Those numbers are too high and just plain unacceptable. Especially when one considers the rigorous hiring and acceptance process just to get into these programs. Allowing students to fail, costs both the students and the organization valuable time and money. So how can this be addressed in order to increase our student success rate?
To answer this question it requires some self-reflection. Some of the issues found during this self-reflection were a lack of consistency between instructors teaching hands on skills; a lack of transparency of the skill expectations; and a lack of time spent practicing those skills. These conclusions led us to the decision to implement EVALS to determine if this platform could assist with addressing those problems that were affecting our success rates.

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Skill evaluation sheets and example videos of those skills are available to the students on the EVALS platform 24/7 eliminating guesswork by the students on the skill expectations. Our instructors have the same access as well, which allows them to properly prepare for teaching those skills creating consistency between our instructors.
There are only so many hours available to practice skills on the drill ground which makes it difficult for students to master the many skills required. EVALS allows us to video the students while they are practicing their skills. Those videos of the students are instantaneously uploaded to that student’s profile allowing the student to view their own performance and compare it to the expectation video that we as staff uploaded as the standard. We have found that this has bridged that gap of not getting enough reps on the training ground.

 

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These are just a few things that EVALS offers in its platform. Due to the capability of the EVALS platform to address instructor inconsistency, create clear student expectations, and create better skill results, our student retention has increased. For the first time in my 9 years of teaching in the fire academy setting, we had a 100% pass rate on our module 1 / Mid-Term skills testing. Every module 1 / Mid-Term testing prior to that had 2 to 8 students fail. Because of this success, I can’t imagine ever go back to the way we used to teach our skills.

Special thanks to Sierra College for the kind words, and to Matt Jewett and the rest of the Staff at the Fire Academy for truly caring about Student Success!

If you are looking to attend a Fire Academy and live in the Sacramento area, Sierra College is a great choice.  Visit the Sierra College Website for more info. 

Getting to know our new learners

Getting to know our new learners.

As the earliest members of Generation Z (those born from the early to mid 1990’s to 2010) get ready to enter our workforce, we face the daunting task of figuring out how to reach, and provide them with the skills necessary for the job. While the “professional” educator may have insight into the varying characteristics of each generation, many of us on the vocational / hands-on side of teaching may be left feeling like this new learner, “just doesn’t get it.” And it leaves us reminiscing about the days when we had to walk back and forth to school, uphill both ways in a blizzard (Wait, you were born and raised in California). It seems every generation will invariably state that the newer generation is not as prepared as the last, but in all actuality, they may be more prepared, or at least smarter, as it is agreed that Generation Z will have the highest IQ out of any Generation to date (Renfro).

So how do we prepare and deliver our content to this generation of learner? We have to start by looking at how they operate. Educator Adam Renfro from www.GettingSmart.com has compiled a very detailed list of characteristics that describe Generation Z in seven categories, from education, to socialization and to commerce. The complete list can be found here.

Adam’s insight into Generation Z as it pertains to learning:

“Their brains are wired for the fast delivery of content, data, and images from computers, video games, and the Internet.”

Integrating hybrid models of LMS (Learning Management Systems) & CMS (Content Management Systems) with traditional instruction, is a way to “Flip” the classroom and take advantage of this highly efficient brain processing. 

“They very much dislike lecture-test classroom.”

This is good for us, and the old adage from Ben Franklin still applies, “Tell me and I forget. Teach me and I remember. Involve me and I learn.”

“They like to have random access to information, love to explore using their own routes, need graphics, want it fun.”

LMS/CMS systems should allow for this. Upload documents, share video and diagrams; allow it to be accessible at any time. These students are life-long learners and don’t shut off their brains when they leave the classroom.

“The classroom challenge is that students are digital and many teachers are analog.”

We shouldn’t sell our collective generations short on this. Though there may be a few of us still holding on to our flip phones, the vast majority of us all walk around with a computer, aka “Smart Phone” in their pocket and have developed, through osmosis, the natural ability to intuitively navigate most LMS’s

“43 percent prefer the digital learning and find it easiest to learn from the Internet.”

Not only do students appreciate this medium, but also it allows for ease of instruction and creating a consistent message / standard amongst the organization’s entire instructor base.  As well as allows for a whole host of helpful Administrative tools.

And while we should take advantage of all of the above points, Adam explains that one of the “…Dangers for the Gen Zs” is that, “…they are described as too dependent upon technology”. So providing them with a healthy blend of e-instruction, while also exposing them to our “old-school” manipulative performance methodologies, seems like the best route for these students. Because as Einstein put it, when “the day comes that technology surpasses human interaction. The world will have a generation of Idiots.”

So what are you doing to “Flip” the classroom? How are you preparing for/adapting to the New Learner? Share your ideas and comments below.