There are great injustices to training, however I think that the greatest injustice to all the students that attend training, be it EMT-B, I, P is that classes make the technician. An EMT is made in the field, the class teaches to pass a test. Reading over the comments to "shake and bake" courses and my personal experiences, it just comes back to the point, a class does not teach one to be an EMT, it just instructs to pass an exam... This is the greatest injustice in my opinion.
If that is the given, then those are crappy programs. One of the reasons accelerated and shake & bake programs needs to cease to exist. Not all courses are taught as training, but rather as education. I definitely can tell those that were trained and those that have received an education.
If you were not taught properly upon how to function within your role without having additional education, then your program was poor. Period. This does not mean your education ceases but one should be competent enough to at least start at the entry level.
The reason the technician label is added because most training institutions fail to educate, but rather "train". Unfortunately that is what the student wants... an easy, short cut, half arse program and thus the results are technicians. What should they expect? How many gripe if they have to take formal basic support level courses such as A & P, Micro, Psychology all at the basic level? All of it is needed to really have a grasp how to
properly function in the role of prehospital provider. Truthfully, a technician is what the majority roles just are... technician as to follow a set guidelines and orders; all because they lack the education and expertise to make decisions upon themselves.
Too many are placing the emphasis of training and education comes from working. I do not disagree that one will develop and hone their expertise and increase their knowledge but to have to learn the basics of the job is not only ridiculous but dangerous. An employer should not be responsible for teaching a person to how to perform at the minimum level. Once you have completed your foundation you should already be prepared to function in that role. Again, if you are not, you and your program have failed.
Many times I wonder if most EMT's even make the technician level, in comparison to other health care technician? At least the technicians have a grasp of their profession and how to perform it when exiting a program.