A Roll Call Video Series for First Responders
E-learning for School Aged Children
Producing a Roll Call Series for first responders to understand better and deal with crimes against children will include experts and the coordination of experts. Conference on Crimes Against Children has been gathering experts from around the nation for 40 years for annual training, with expertise in criminal activity, prosecution, and law. Supporting their efforts toward educating professionals who deal with crimes against children, the Roll Call series will include their expertise and coordination of long-term partners in education. Funds will pay for all development and production elements from a variety of stakeholders and the distribution to law enforcement agencies in each state where the training is made available. The estimated cost for this roll call series is $120,000 for the first state, the originating state of Texas. Other states will require an additional $10-$20,000 in post-production for revisions based on state laws, protocols, and distribution. $25,000 will be needed to convert the training from law enforcement to medical Emergency Departments for professionals, which includes healthcare and child advocate professional oversight. The completed Roll Call Video Series production will be donated to the Crimes Against Children Conference and the Conference on Crimes Against Women for distribution to law enforcement agencies across the United States. Production will begin when the minimum amount of $40,000 is raised and will be completed as additional funds are received. The funds that are raised above the $120,000 amount will continue production for other states. The first states to receive the Roll Call Video Series are those with cities with the highest level of prostitution, which is most likely to have the highest concentration of human trafficking.
Why provide video training when in-person training is conducted using internal agency personnel?
Not all agencies receive the same quality of training since they have a limited budget for bringing in experienced national subject matter experts for their education. In-person training is much needed, but video is a great alternative because it can be used often and can be distributed to rural areas where training opportunities are limited. On-the-job video training is well received, and it helps create a national standard based on free training from top national experts.
Why not give directly to our local police agency for development?
Red tape. Creating education from within takes a lot more time and money and more than likely has a smaller budget with less national collective experience. Our efforts will support local in-person training.
Give what you can, and help me kick-start this project! For the remainder of 2023, my challenge is to raise a one-time amount of 1% of what the general public and companies give annually to pediatric cancer research for a one-time raise of $2,000,000. This is very attainable for about the same number of children who are abducted into human trafficking every year. The link below will lead you to a page that starts at a one-time gift of $10.
Help with the minimum amount to get started.
Bronze – 2,000 people give $10
Silver – 100 give $100
Gold – 10 give $1,000
The project will get started at $40,000!
Producing impressive, age-appropriate gamification e-learning starts with core teaching objectives based on current criminal activity against children through leading criminal experts and child advocates across the country. From there, learning is divided into age demographics and skill levels, requiring a new group of specialized individuals in educational retention and gaming architecture. Research and development is a major portion of this project, requiring almost 30% of the budget or $550,000. Once a donation amount of $250,000 is received, work on this project will begin. The objective for research and development will be the educational direction with desired outcomes for each age group. The next level is web and game development for e-learning, which requires a bidding process from local and top game providers in the US. The $1 million budget for this part of the project not only pays for design, content, development, database development, gaming navigation, and all other components related to interactive learning but also includes experts and professionals related to crimes against children input and direction throughout the process. The remaining $300,000 is for budget variance and unforeseen expenses. If the project is completed within or less than expected, those funds will be used for improving image quality and speed and will also be used for a wider reach in distribution.
Are you sure you can get this training into schools?
The project will be introduced to school districts by local police departments that already have a relationship and provide safety training and protocols for emergencies. It fits curriculum guidelines, provides teacher guides and software, and is associated with existing school safety training issues, from cyberbullying to active shooter awareness.
How can you measure the outcomes to know if it's working?
Statewide measurement can be provided through public police records, FBI communications, and other private database providers. The program will see a measured outcome in the first year it's provided, and in each school it's accepted. Awareness is always good, yet learning makes it more personal and retainable for action.
Give what you can, and help me kick-start this project! For the remainder of 2023, my challenge is to raise a one-time amount of 1% of what the general public and companies give annually to pediatric cancer research for a one-time raise of $2,000,000. This is very attainable for about the same number of children who are abducted into human trafficking every year. The link below will lead you to a page that starts at a one-time gift of $10.
Help with the minimum amount to get started.
Bronze – 10,000 people give $10
Silver – 1,000 give $100
Gold – 100 give $1,000
The project will get started at $300,000!
Provided a portion of much needs Smart TVs and network cabling to CHI St. Luke's Sugar Land.
Read moreProviding substance abuse and DWI awareness to high school students through visual explanation.
Read moreDIREC Educational Programming is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization.
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