Fire Science Technology (FST) at Southwest Virginia Community College
Distance Learning
Time of Day
Term
- FST 100 - Principles of Emergency Services
- Provides an overview to fire protection; career opportunities in fire protection and related fields; philosophy and history of fire protection/service; fire loss analysis; organization and function to public and private fire protection services; fire departments as part of local government; laws and regulations affecting the fire service; fire service nomenclature; specific fire protection functions; basic fire chemistry and physics; introduction to fire protection systems; introduction to fire strategy and tactics.Lecture 3 hours per week.
3 credits - FST 105 - Fire Suppression Operations
- Introduces the fundamentals of fire suppression. Explores fire behavior and basic physical and chemical laws of fire dynamics. Prepares student to understand the need for quick operational decisions made on the fire ground including emergency management.Lecture 3 hours per week.
3 credits - FST 110 - Fire Behavior and Combustion
- Explores the theories and fundamentals of how and why fires start, spread, and how they are controlled.Lecture 3 hours per week.
3 credits - FST 111 - Hazardous Materials Response
- Studies hazardous materials storage, standards, and applicable laws designed to protect the public and emergency personnel. Discusses specific methods and techniques used by the emergency worker in the abatement of hazardous materials incidents.Lecture 3 hours per week.
3 credits - FST 112 - Hazardous Materials Chemistry
- Provides basic fire chemistry relating to the categories of hazardous materials including problems of recognition, reactivity, and health encountered by firefighters.Lecture 3 hours per week.
3 credits - FST 115 - Fire Prevention
- Provides fundamental information regarding the history and philosophy of fire prevention, organization and operation of a fire prevention bureau, use of fire codes, identification and correction of fire hazards, and the relationships of fire prevention with built-in fire protection systems, fire investigation, and fire and life-safety education.Lecture 3 hours per week.
3 credits - FST 120 - Occupational Safety and Health for the Fire Service
- Introduces the basic concepts of occupational health and safety as it relates to emergency service organizations. Includes risk evaluation and control procedures for fire stations, training sites, emergency vehicles, and emergency situations involving fire, EMS, hazardous materials, and technical rescue. (Upon completion of this course, students should be able to establish and manage a safety program in an emergency service organization.Lecture 3 hours per week.
3 credits - FST 205 - Fire Protection Hydraulics and Water Supply
- Provides a foundation of theoretical knowledge in order to understand the principles of the use of water in fire protection and to apply hydraulic principles to analyze and to solve water supply problems.Lecture 3 hours per week.
3 credits - FST 210 - Legal Aspects of Fire Service
- Introduces the Federal, State, and local laws that regulate emergency services, national standards influencing emergency services,, standard of care, tort, liability, and a review of relevant court cases.Lecture 3 hours per week.
3 credits - FST 215 - Fire Protection Systems
- Provides information relating to the features of design and operation of fire detection and alarm systems, heat and smoke control systems, special protection and sprinkler systems, water supply for fire protection and portable fire extinguishers.Lecture 3 hours per week.
3 credits - FST 220 - Building Construction for Fire Protection
- Provides the components of building construction that relate to fire and life safety. Focuses on firefighter safety. Covers the elements of construction and design of structures and how they are key factors when inspecting buildings, preplanning fire operations, and operating at emergencies.Lecture 3 hours per week.
3 credits - FST 235 - Strategy and Tactics
- Provides an in-depth analysis of the principles of fire control through utilization of personnel, equipment, and extinguishing agents on the fire ground.Lecture 3 hours per week.
3 credits