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Cognitivre Conclave 4/29-30/23
Some of the ARRs pushed out on last weekend's Cognitive Conclave ...
https://swiftsilentdeadly.com/aar-ge...tive-conclave/
"It has been quite some time since I have attended a pistol class. I’m not a GM or anything, but I have a decent level of skill with a pistol, and handgun classes just haven’t been a training priority for me over the past few years. This year I ran across the Cognitive Conclave, a pistol class offering something different and I had to do it. This is a detailed, after-action review of that class."
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Great review. That guy writes a very good blog I’d almost forgotten about.
I hope to see another one of these courses somewhere reasonably close to me
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It was a very good course. Encouraged me to look at the realities of a shooting problem in public spaces.
Well worth the money and time.
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That is an excellent write-up of the course.
I can't really add much to that, but I agree it was definitely worth the time and cost. A bargain really, for three very good instructors.
Much of it was based on adding a cognitive load through problem solving while performing the mechanics of shooting. In several scenarios students were allowed to make their own decisions about how to solve a given problem. The technical shooting part was necessary but just the beginning -- a foundation on top of which the real meat of the class was layered.
Highly recommend.
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One observation that I don’t think made it into my forthcoming AAR (which is nowhere near as well done as Justin’s):
As cognitive load increased, so too did the value of technical shooting skill. It’s been postulated elsewhere on this forum that the value of a high degree of technical skill is that it allows you to spend more time worrying about the problem. Particularly with Hearne’s block with the lights, I found that to be true.
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