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It's not a rule (that I know of), but it's a standard part of the more serious training classes. The companies I'm familiar with have been teaching it that way for 15+ years. Edited to "often"


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In my experience, this is standard "training" almost everywhere.

Great response, thanks. I didn't know that was part of the training.

Agreed! That is what I teach when I do training.

This was true in a recent Swiss training as well.

It is usually called rule of five, 3 is half of it and makes people sometimes forget to write move assignment.

I'm pretty sure business do not like to actually train people nowadays. :)


No this is literally the example we were given. I have no idea if the trainer actually heard of a case where someone was penalized for this, or if they concocted a trivial example to make the lesson clearer.

In manufacturing training too. Basically any training that involves physical handling.

I don't, as a SW guy it's part of on-the-job training!

Yes. It could be part of the training.

It's a mandatory training requirement before your first solo.

Yes, that's exactly the training I was referring to.

yes, that's how I was trained as well.

No idea, but these are all examples they gave us during our training.

This is something I see claimed a lot. I'd be very interested in any information you have about this. I find it very unlikely this kind of training is part of the official training, so I'm imagining it's some kind of unintentional conditioning? Or is it done on purpose by the officers?

That's part of your training.

In fact, it's probably helpful for them to practice that before they have to on the job.

It's sort of key when taking that approach to actually succeed in not requiring the retraining.

It sounded like it was a mandatory part of managerial training.

This is actually a principle of training medics: Learn one, do one, teach one.
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