I had a trainee who had a Masters degree, and suddenly decided he wanted to be a cop. He had zero common sense. He was completely non-functional in hostile situations, and he couldnt talk his way out of a wet paper bag when dealing with a hostile subject.
But on the flipside, I had a college student who became one of our departments most highly decorated officers.
It depends on the person, and their abilities. But in all honesty, my findings have hardly been mixed. I'd say only ten percent of the college level recruits I've trained have been worthwhile candidates. The other ninety percent just could not function as police officers for one reason or another. Maybe htey were too rooted i nacademia to actually work in the real world. I dont know. But in retrospect, ninety percent of non college grads work out in our training program, while ten percent wash out. Kinf of weird how it works out that way.
2007-01-25 01:11:24
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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in case you have a link i might desire to reply to your question plenty extra advantageous. I doubt which you have any information from "numerous cities" until eventually you're a police chief or something. that's been my journey that on my own 1500 member branch and coping with 2 different plenty smaller departments that the black officers, for the main section, don't have college stages whilst lots of the white officers do.
2016-09-27 23:09:23
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answer #2
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answered by doolin 4
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Not necessarily.
I had a degree when I went through the academy, but it didn't prepare me for a lot of what went on in the street.
I've worked with officers with only a high school diploma who were better negotiators, and who could talk people into jail instead of having to fight with them. They had the heart, the stomach and the nerve to do the job. You don't learn that in college.
A degree really helps if you want to promote, though.
2007-01-24 15:10:56
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answer #3
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answered by Lily VonSchtupp 3
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not necessarily. you can learn everything there is to learn about law enforcement from books. but, once you get out in the "real world" things are totally different. I spent 7 years as an EMT. and I learned alot from the books. but not very many calls went "by the book". you have to have common sense. I've known many book smart people that didn't have the sense god gave a goose. so it takes alot of different aspects not just education.
2007-01-24 15:12:54
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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It can, but it is not always the case. College educated cops can also be corrupt.It really depends on the character of the person in question.
2007-01-24 22:51:57
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answer #5
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answered by WC 7
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He may not necessarily make a better officer but he will probably do better in passing the promotion tests.
2007-01-24 15:15:26
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answer #6
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answered by Teesip 2
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No, a more experienced officer makes a better officer. School takes you to the crime scene, experience tells you who committed it.
2007-01-24 15:16:56
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answer #7
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answered by River 4
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not all the time.... if i had to choose between a officer who is way more educated and a officer who has more experience i would choose the more experienced officer...
2007-01-24 15:23:33
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answer #8
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answered by Dont get Infected 7
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No.
However, being willing to learn and staying open minded does.
The sheepskin only brings in a couple extra bucks.
2007-01-24 15:13:30
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answer #9
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answered by jcurrieii 7
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Well you'll have more knowledge about that certain topic, but it all comes down to who you are on the inside, and the decisions that you do to impact people.
An upside to it though, you get a bigger paycheck..
2007-01-24 15:10:36
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answer #10
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answered by Helena 2
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