Results 1 to 6 of 6

Thread: AAR: D.R.A.W. School Instructor Training - Pistol

  1. #1
    Member
    Join Date
    Jun 2014
    Location
    Heading for the hills

    AAR: D.R.A.W. School Instructor Training - Pistol

    Just so you can have a handle on my experience level, I will briefly lay out my background as it pertains to shooting. I came into federal law enforcement in 1994 and was tapped as a firearms instructor in 1995. Became the lead firearms instructor in 2001 and held that position until I was promoted out of that in 2013. I continue to serve as an instructor. My office currently has about 30 sworn officers.
    I am 50 years old and grew up with firearms. I hunt on a regular basis and have shot some IDPA and USPSA matches. Most of my formal firearms instruction has come through my employment. My system has its own training program which has improved greatly over the years. We are not on the bleeding edge of training, but from talking with folks from other agencies, our program seems to stack up pretty well in comparison to most. Locally, we routinely conduct training that exceeds the basic, national requirements. I have graduated my agency’s two-week long initial instructor class based at FLETC, as well as several subsequent re-certifications. I have shot with a nationally ranked three-gun competitor who has competed internationally. I have taken a course run by an active military/active LE reserve who was also successful USPSA competitor. I took another class with a legit SF guy who re-deployed as a contractor in one of the sandboxes. This particular trainer has a media presence and had a very impressive skillset that I got to witness first hand. I have also attended a few stinkers of LE firearms classes where the information being presented was somewhere between not helpful and downright harmful. I’m not sure this really matters, but I have frequented gunboards (Lightfighter, Tactical Forums (yup), M4C, TPI, and PF (along with a few others along the way)). I read extensively (daily), but post very little.

    Also, I think I need to say this. Despite over two decades in a federal law enforcement agency, and most of that as a (part time) firearms instructor – with all the “free” ammo and training that this implies, I have been quite dissatisfied with my skill level with a pistol. I do okay, but given the access to ammo and training I have had, I would think I should be a much better shooter than I am. To steal and corrupt a quote, I am just a Try Hard with a pistol. I am not blessed with fantastic strength, nor hand-eye coordination. I have, however, taken the Miculek approach to shooting – being the first one on, and last one off, the range. I have worked pretty diligently, but have simply never gotten the results that I think should be commensurate with the work I’ve put in. It’s a little frustrating at times.
    I know there is much I do not know, but I think I know my way around firearms and training fairly well.

    I was almost let down when I got voluntold to attend the D.R.A.W. School training program. I had never heard of D.R.A.W and thumbing through the website left me underwhelmed. I was fully prepared for some sort of Center Axis Relock nonsense. And for the money, I would have rather gone to train with Ron Avery* or Bill Rogers*. (*Actually, the tuition for D.R.A.W. would have gotten me close on a couple of days with one of those guys, but then there would be travel, etc.)

    I decided that I was going to walk into the training with an open, but skeptical mind and would sift the information pretty hard for any shenanigans. I figured that in the worst case scenario, I would get five days out of the office and some trigger time. I was determined to take what was useful, and discard what was not.

    Overall, my take on the shooting techniques as taught by D.R.A.W. instructor Jason Speller is that they are modern, validated techniques that, and this is important, have been highly refined by the application of sports science. One illustration of this is the method of gripping the pistol. D.R.A.W. teaches an aggressive thumbs forward grip that has the support wrist cammed forward and locked out. This, in and of itself, is not ground-breaking. (I am trying to dig out an old VHS tape by Kelly McCann from the late 1990’s where he describes this grip in detail. That was the first time I became aware of that method and it immediately made sense to me.) But, what Speller has done, is to go back and deconstruct this grip with Olympic sports medicine trainers and figure out why it is so effective, and he also added at least one component to that grip that I have sort of seen and done, but not in any sort of committed way. Beyond that, every aspect of every student’s grip was analyzed in minute detail. Speller knows exactly what he wants in the grip – and why. And he imparts this to the student in very clear, precise, and understandable language.

    This is important and what I believe makes the D.R.A.W. curriculum so unique so let me say this another way. To the casual observer who is versed in modern pistol-shooting methods, all of the techniques taught by Speller would look very familiar. I have been shooting “thumbs forward” since about 2001 when my agency adopted Glocks (yeah, we were late to the party). But my grip was only marginally effective because I did not grasp the “why” behind it all. During these five days with Speller, I flat made him earn his money. With nearly every technique he introduced (and we covered a lot of ground), I had a question or three about some finer point of “why” or, I wanted to know why this way and not that way. Yup, I was that guy. Speller, to his credit, answered my questions in detail, but kept the class on track. In all candor, I had genuine questions and was not trying to play “stump the chump,” but that same genuine level of inquiry has thrown other trainers into vapor lock. Speller never missed a beat. He absolutely knows, and can explain, the “why” of what he is teaching. And the “why” was never, “Cause I said so.” or, “Just trust me, it works.” There were always objective and logical reasons why, this way and not that way. He has developed and refined the techniques on a granular level.

    In broad strokes, we covered: stance, dynamic movement, grip, drawstroke, one-handed shooting (both hands including transitioning between hands), two-handed shooting, reloads, malfunction drills, shooting from prone and supine – both with cover, recovering dropped weapons, and incapacitated officer drills (which basically means doing everything listed with one hand/each hand). While Speller is looking for good speed, accuracy is demanded.

    The teaching method was pretty straight-forward. We spent a lot of time in the classroom working dry drills. A typical day in this five day course was: three hours in the classroom using cleared weapons with BarrelBloks and MagBloks installed. Each technique was first explained, then demonstrated, then students were taken through the technique with repetitions that went from slow, intermediate, full speed – then with dynamic movement. Many techniques culminated in the classroom with head-to-head match ups with students. The atmosphere was friendly, but competitive. It was a room full of cops, and cops don’t like to lose. Once we cycled through those evolutions, we grabbed ammo and hit the range for live fire.

    I need to pause here and address the BarrelBlok and MagBlok equipment. https://bloksafety.com/ These items are prominently featured on the D.R.A.W. School webpage. Before attending the class, I sort of expected that the class was going to degenerate into a sales pitch for these, and perhaps other, products. Nothing could be further from the truth. The BarrelBlok and MagBlok made it possible to safely train with duty weapons in a sterile environment. At no point over my five days with Speller did I ever get the slightest twinge of unease with regard to safety. This despite the fact that we had 14 live weapons in the room and they ended up (after the installation of the BarrelBloks and MagBloks) being pointed all over the place. Speller did a fantastic job of maintaining a safe environment – and this was largely a function of the use of the BarrelBlok system. (We had officers from five separate agencies in attendance; some more switched on than others, but between Speller’s management of the training, and the use of the BarrelBlok, we were good to go.). Bottom line, the BarrelBlok and MagBlok are not some gimmick – they are legitimate training tools designed to let officers go from a training session with their duty weapon to the street without having to break the weapon down. You can go from training to street ready in not much more time than it takes to reload your magazines. We could not have accomplished the training that we did, as safely and conveniently as we did, without the BarrelBlok and MagBlok.
    Okay, back to the firing line. Once on the line, Speller had live fire exercises for each technique we had just worked on. Typically, he would explain the live fire drill, then shoot it himself. We would then get on the line and shoot the drills. Speller maintained super situational awareness on the line and everyone got coached as needed. Speller was very safe and effective on the line. The drills were well thought out and allowed you to stress test what you had just done in the classroom. It was pretty interesting to go through that process as a student. I found myself just grinning and giggling a few times because some things that I have chased for a long time opened up for me. For instance, despite working on this for months and months, it was during the second day of class I was actually able to track my sights in recoil (this was a by-product of the grip and stance and it just sort of happened, it was not necessarily a training goal in the class – I was shooting a Glock 22 with full power loads).

    This was not a high round count class. We shot something like 500 rounds (if that) in four days. Typically, 50 or so rounds would take care of the live fire sessions that lasted about an hour. So it was probably about a 3:1 ratio classroom to live fire. But don’t let that fool you. We worked hard in the classroom and much learning occurred in there – the live fire simply let you test drive and validate what you were just working on. Again, it was a pretty amazing process to be immersed in. And the classroom was not boring in the least. Speller was very engaging and everything he put out was meat – no fat. The classroom was information-dense and we were drinking from the proverbial fire hose. It was kind of fun. Oh, one thing on the “drinking from the fire hose” comment. Speller was pushing a lot of information to us. But he did it in a way that allowed me (and most of us) to absorb and retain it. We got good written information to backstop that, and will be getting additional written material (all the drills, etc.) soon.

    So that pretty much describes the first three and a half days of the class. Three hours of dry training in the classroom, followed by an hour or so on the range; lunch; repeat. By the end of each day, we were all pretty smoked.

    The afternoon of Day Four was probably the most memorable part of the training. It was time to shot the D.R.A.W. School qual course. Let me just say, this ain’t your granddaddy’s qual course. This course involved one-handed shooting, weak-hand shooting (to include drawing from the holster weak hand), weak-hand only reloads, clearing a failure to fire times two, shooting from cover in a squatting position and a kneeling position, shooting around a barricade at 15 yards both strong and weak hand (six rounds each), and six rounds from the 25 yard line from the prone, behind cover – all on the clock. Oh, by the way, you had to score a 95 percent or better.

    We had some folks in this class who walked in as pretty good shooters. But as we got a look at the qual course, everybody pretty much quit goofing around and got quiet. It was interesting to watch. The qual course was demanding – no two ways about it. That sums up the whole course – demanding, but doable. Speller gave us a live fire run through of the qual course. Afterwards, there was a lot of mumbling among the students and it was obvious none of us were sure we were going to perform to the level need to qualify – myself included. It was… humbling. Nothing about the qual course was outlandish, but it required a hard focus and adherence to technique to be successful.
    After the run through, we ran it for money in waves of four shooters. Much to my surprise, the students were stepping up and getting the hits they needed. I ended up in the last wave (not by choice). Stepping up to shoot the qual for score was (again), interesting. The feeling I had was that of stepping up to shoot a stage in a USPSA match. I had a good idea of what I needed to do, but I knew I was going to have to get after it to make my hits. There was a little anxiety. I did two things to address my nerves. One, as suggested by Speller at some point during the course, was to take in a deep breath and then exhale completely before each stage. The other thing was the decision to be as true as I could be to what had been taught all week. I’m convinced that my conscious decision to use what Speller gave us during the week that got me through the course of fire. I was much relieved to get my 98% score. (Speller has had only two students score 100%.)

    We did have one student who failed to make his 95% on any of his three goes at the course. It worked out that this was one of my guys. It also worked out that I helped work the course (moving barricades, etc.) while my guy was working through his subsequent runs. He did not qualify that day. My guy was visibly frustrated with himself and was getting all up in his head about his score. Speller told him he would have an additional opportunity to try again the next day.

    Day Five rolled around and it was time for my guy to have another go at the qual course. He looked a little less flustered than the previous day. Once again, myself and another guy from my agency helped with the logistics of the course of fire. This turned out to be an opportunity for me to gain a bit of insight into who Speller is as an instructor, and to learn. Honestly, I was there to help facilitate the course of fire, but most of my mental focus was on carefully watching how Speller managed this situation. This was a great opportunity for him to screw the pooch right here and lose all of the credibility he had established through the week.

    Speller ran my guy through the course of fire and gave him some coaching prior to each stage. It is important to note, however, that he maintained the integrity of the course. Speller has standards that he was not going to compromise. My guy shot a 90 on this attempt. You could see the frustration mount again. My guy was having a lot of trouble shooting from the barricade at 15 yards. He was pretty okay shooting from the strong side, but he was nine kinds of jacked up from the weak side. He was complaining of vision issues and an inability to get a lock on his sight picture on the left side of the barricade. Rather than dismiss this as excuse-making, Speller stepped through that section of the course with him and worked on some diagnostics to figure out what was going on. The upshot is that Speller validated that my guy had some legitimate vision issues and devised a solution which (if I recall correctly) involved making sure sight alignment was acquired before rolling out from the barricade (standard stuff I know, but I don’t think my guy was doing that while shooting the course) and using his right eye (sub-optimal, yes, but it was a work around that was better than misses). The upshot is my guy shot a 97.something% on his next attempt. He was a happy guy.

    The point here is this. Speller could have easily dismissed my guy as a poor shooter who simply lacked the skills to make the cut. Instead, he hung in there and coached him to some success. His patient approach walked that line between holding the shooter accountable, but steering him in the right direction. I learned a whole lot about being an instructor while watching Speller work with this shooter. As a side note, the more my guy worked the techniques he learned in the preceding days, the better his hits got. The D.R.A.W. School method works.

    One great thing about this class was that Speller’s assistant (who also happens to be his wife), took voluminous photos during the course. We have been promised copies of these once they cull through them and discard the less helpful ones. These are not provided as mere momentos (though they are that). Speller went through these photos nightly and used them to analyze each student’s technique and we received additional feedback the next day based on those photos. Speller actually used the camera in real time (using the screen on the camera) to show me that I was not executing a properly aggressive forward lean (I was too upright) while shooting.

    This was probably adequately illustrated above, but I want to comment on Speller’s instructional style and demeanor. As someone who has been a trainer of various sorts for more than two decades, I can’t help but evaluate other instructors through that lens. Speller has a depth and breadth of knowledge that is, frankly, astounding. Again, I hit him with some pretty pointed questions during all of this, and he was unflappable. He simply addressed my questions or concerns in an engaged manner and gave me the answers I wanted. Spellers language, and his whole approach to this curriculum, is precise, meticulous, and measured. Exactly what you want in someone who is teaching life-saving skills.

    There were a couple of students who, I suspect, struggled to keep up, but Speller did not talk down to them. (Heck, he didn’t even talk down to me.) He met everybody where they were. Speller never did fully disclose his background, but the best I can tell, he has been places and done things. I failed to detect any air of superiority from him, even though he was obviously superior in many ways. As far as I can tell, he is an honorable, intelligent man. And he is a man on a mission. It is his stated goal to get this shooting method to every law enforcement officer in the country. I hope he hits that goal – we will all be safer for it.

    Now, you are probably reading this thinking, “This guy has some sort of bromance going here.” Not really. I am simply very convinced as to the efficacy of the D.R.A.W. School training method based on my experience in this class. Downsides to this method? There is probably one. Taken individually, there is nothing super high speed or technically difficult about using the D.R.A.W. School method to improve your shooting. But you have to do the work and use the techniques. This is not going to work well for lazy or unmotivated folks – but you can say the same of any other system as well.

    My bottom line is that I walked in as a skeptic, but I walked out a believer. If you have an opportunity to train in the D.R.A.W School method, do what you have to do to make that happen. If you put in the work, you will come away a better shooter and instructor. I said earlier that I had some frustration because my skill level is not what I think it should be in recognition of the work I’ve put in over the years. Having completed the D.R.A.W. School, I feel like I’ve found the keys to the pistol-shooting kingdom. I wish I would have had this training at the beginning of my career. This training experience is what I was chasing with the trainers mentioned at the beginning of this review. Those guys know how to shoot for sure, but they weren’t able to translate that fully into something I could use – perhaps they themselves did not even really understand why they shoot so well. Nearly all of my firearms training, done both personally and professionally, was largely based on a “monkey see, monkey do” methodology. And I am not knocking those other trainers – it’s just the way things are.

    Speller has absolutely taken a thinking man’s approach to the art of shooting and he translates that over into something that is accessible if you are willing to put in the work. Of all the schools and training I have undertaken in the last 25 years, these five days of D.R.A.W. School have been the best and most productive of the lot. I think I am more proud and pleased with having completed this course than any other I have ever taken. Very well done. If you are in law enforcement and have an opportunity to train with Jason Speller via D.R.A.W, I recommend, without reservation, that you do so.
    Last edited by Tensaw; 11-26-2017 at 07:13 AM.

  2. #2
    @Tensaw, It sounds like a fantastic course.

    Can you quantify some of the time/accuracy standards from the course? Can you provide some details regarding Mr. Spellers background/experience?

    Thanks.
    C Class shooter.

  3. #3
    Member
    Join Date
    Jun 2014
    Location
    Heading for the hills
    Kevin - Regarding the time/accuracy standards for the course, the only time we were "graded" on these aspects was during the qualification course. That was shot on a (IIRC) B-27 from 3 - 25 yards and the score needed was 95% to pass. I am not aware of every the scoring system for every qual course extant, but I would be willing to bet that there are very few LE courses that require 95% for a passing score. But that doesn't tell the whole story.

    The qual course (and really nearly every live fire drill shot during the entire course) incorporated some additional element to each stage beyond simply drawing and firing. So, dynamic movement, drawing using the weak hand only, shooting weak hand only, shooting from kneeling, prone, from behind a barricade, clearing malfunctions - all of these (and more) were part of the qual course. So, this was definitely not a precision shooting course. The focus of this course was not "just" about shooting, it was really more of an officer survival course that worked on a lot of weapon manipulations. Only after you addressed these weapon manipulations did you get to actually shoot. This is not an aid to marksmanship. As we shot throughout the week, Speller inspected the targets after each iteration of drills and would generally give each shooter brief feedback on what the target was telling him, and/or what he observed while you were shooting - all with the goal of helping the shooter clean-up any issues they were having. As much as I hate to use the phrase, Speller was looking for a balance of speed and accuracy. Sloppy hits were not going to get it done.

    I hope that I am communicating this across. Because nothing we did live fire was static, most people were not getting surgical hits. My best recollection is that if you were inside the 9-ring of the B-27 during drills, that was acceptable (again because you may have just had to get out of the holster weak hand only, fire two, reload (weak hand only), then fire four, with some movement thrown in for good measure). Start putting rounds outside the 9-ring, and Speller would give you a little more attention and feedback. If there was a focus during the training, it was problem-solving and addressing things that most officers rarely train on. We ran the slide enough that, by the end of the second day, the band-aids and athletic tape were making an appearance. Did I mention there was a lot of weapon manipulation?

    So Speller was neither a nazi about accuracy (nor speed), but he did want solid hits inside a decent time hack. I know that's pretty loose, but that's what I have.

    Regarding his background, as noted in the original post, if Speller talked about that in detail, I missed it. It is my honest opinion that he did not talk about his background because the program stands on its own merits. He was the opposite of a self-promoter. He simply stepped up and performed. I will see if I can get in touch with him and see what he says on his background.
    Last edited by Tensaw; 11-26-2017 at 02:16 PM.

  4. #4
    Member
    Join Date
    Jun 2014
    Location
    Heading for the hills
    Quote Originally Posted by Kevin B. View Post
    @Tensaw, It sounds like a fantastic course.

    Can you provide some details regarding Mr. Spellers background/experience?

    Thanks.
    So, Speller had replied to my email. In doing so, he reminded me that he did reference this and breeze through his background early in the class. That said, here is his response.

    In terms of my background, you are right, I don’t like talking about myself and prefer to allow the course to stand on its own merits, which it should! The program isn’t about me, but rather about a simple, duplicatable curriculum of lifesaving skills. With that said, however, I did share with the class a little about my background which spans fire, EMS and law enforcement. I started my career in 1992 as a firefighter and then went into fire investigations. After 9/11, I went into the private sector working across the country in terrorism planning and disaster preparedness training. I was a DoD contractor and went overseas in the Pacific theater with the Marine Corp. When I came back, I went to work as a civilian instructor for a police department. After that, I went to the NC Dept. of Justice to get my state instructor certifications at the North Carolina Justice Academy.
    Last edited by Tensaw; 12-03-2017 at 08:12 PM.

  5. #5
    Thanks for following up.
    C Class shooter.

  6. #6
    Great AAR!

    And you've piqued my curiosity. Can you divulge Mr. Speller's insights concerning the grip? Im trying to improve my grip and would love to hear how sports medicine/science are shedding light on the issue.....

User Tag List

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •