Air Force ROTC active violence training April 9
Kansas State University Air Force ROTC Detachment 270 cadets will work with the Kansas Bureau of Investigation to conduct a large-scale active violence training from 4-6 p.m. on Thursday, April 9, in Gen. Richard B. Myers Hall. The training will include sounds of gunfire and realistic-looking victims and perpetrators.
The live training is an addition to the national Air Force ROTC requirement of 60-120 minutes of ALICE training, which stands for Alert, Lockdown, Inform, Counter and Evacuate. Through a partnership with local emergency professionals, the training will give ROTC cadets hands-on experience so they can apply what they have learned from an ALICE course.
For safety, all cadets will have personal protective equipment, weapons will be checked to make sure they contain dummy rounds and the building will be completely searched before each scenario. The cadets will be able to act out the ALICE steps, which help civilians plan and proactively respond to violence rather than a traditional lockdown-only approach.