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281 Educators providing Courses in Nottingham

Blue Stream Academy

blue stream academy

Belper

Blue Stream Academy [https://www.bluestreamacademy.com/] provide CPD certified eLearning courses and management resources for health and care professionals throughout the UK.  Services: * GP eLearning and Management Platform * Health and Social Care eLearning and Management Platform * Dental eLearning and Management Platform * Hospice eLearning and Management Platform * Urgent and Private Care eLearning and Management Platform Popular eLearning Courses: * Fire Safety * Information Governance * Equality and Diversity * Principles of Health and Safety * Anaphylaxis  * Basic Life Support (levels 1 and 2) * Chaperoning * Safeguarding Adults (levels 1, 2 and 3) * Safeguarding Children (levels 1, 2 and 3)  * Infection Prevention and Control * Conflict Resolution * Care Certificate eLearning Course (15 eLearning modules and a practical assessment system) Click here to view a full list of modules. [https://content.bluestreamacademy.com/websitedocs/module_list.pdf] Management Platform Features: * 18 Compliance Reports * Digital Policy Recording and Agreement System * Diary and Collaboration System  * Customisable Trainee Profiles * Face-to-face Course Booking System * External Training Tracking * Complimentary Vacancy Advertisement OPTIONAL ADD-ON - Human Resources (HR) Management System * Rota and Shift Management * HR Reporting * HR Staff Profiles * The Bradford Factor Score * Objectives and Appraisal Tracking OPTIONAL ADD-ON - The CQC Health Check System * Room and Asset Management * Compliance Documentation Storage * Red-Amber-Green (RAG) Compliance Rating * Policy System Integration * eLearning Report Integration  Partnerships, Integrations and Certifications * FourteenFish Integration * First Practice Management (FPM) Integration * Continuing Professional Development (CPD) Certification * ISO27001 Certification * Skills for Care Endorsement * LMC Buying Group Approved Supplier * Hospice Quality Partnership (HQP) Approved Supplier

Iksac - Ilkeston And Kimberly Sub Aqua Club

iksac - ilkeston and kimberly sub aqua club

5.0(2)

Nottingham

IKSAC is one of the oldest diving clubs in the Midlands having been in existence in one form or another since the early 1970’s. We specialise in diver training within a friendly supportive club environment. We have in excess of 60 members at all levels of qualification. Some new members have yet to progress from the pool whilst some of the older members have been diving for over 30 years. Ages range from the younger ones of teen-age, right through to retirement age (and beyond in some cases). Our former Diving Officer (D.O.) and long standing member Trevor Perry has written a brief history of the club (see below). A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE CLUB. The club was formed in 1973 being BSAC branch 592. It used Ilkeston pool as it’s base, which at that time still had the 3 metre diving pool which was useful for diver training. At this time Kimberley Leisure Centre was about to open, and members John Morris and Ray Booth approached the centre to see if it would be possible to use it for training. Permission was granted with the condition that the club changed it’s name to Ilkeston and Kimberley Sub Aqua Club. And so on the 5th October 1974, the day the leisure centre opened, IKSAC was born. We have been based at Kimberley since then. At Ilkeston (the date escapes me) we had a party underwater in the deep pool. It was decked out on the bottom with tables and chairs, and the divers ate fruit, and drank soft drinks and beer underwater. The TV heard about the event and sent along a crew to film us. A BMX bike had been donated and they filmed us riding off the top diving board. The presenter had a change of clothes and dropped off the diving board fully clothed to join us. We made a spot on prime time TV news. Another first for IKSAC was the production of a training video in 1984. Back then in the early days of sport diving there were no training aids and all lessons had to be handwritten by the D.O. As luck would have it, the club boasted a professional forensic videographer amongst it’s ranks. And so on the 10th March 1984 we made the training video “Diving from small boats”. Looking back now the boats are a bit dated bit the majority of the content is still relevant. We sold many copies to diving clubs (with a lot going abroad) and some to the RNLI. In those days Fort Bovisands at Plymouth was busy with training and B.A.D lads courses (basic air diving). IKSAC members used to go down and train on the commercial diving equipment, leading to deep diving,warm water suits, underwater cutting using thermic lances, underwater video and explosives. The weekends that the fleet was in port used to be spent on Union Street. IKSAC members were also pioneering diving in the Red Sea. In the 70’s and 80’s when Sharm was still a Bedouin village in the middle of nowhere, club members used to fly into Israel and cross the border at Taba. We would then travel up and down Sinai in jeeps, sleeping at the side of the sea, and eating food prepared by the Bedouins over a large blowtorch. Around the late 90’s we hit a crisis with membership. Because of the decisions taken by BSAC and PADI to commercialise their operations, we had a problem getting instructors onto training courses which were costing hundreds of pounds. The decision was taken to leave BSAC and join the SAA and so in February 1999 IKSAC became SAA branch 945, which is where we remain to this day. Trevor Perry March 2011

Merchanttraveller Excursions

merchanttraveller excursions

London

After leaving the UK in 2010 and embarking on a backpacking trip to Indonesia alone spending 12 days in the forest with three local guides. Wanda, Bendy and Ping yes that was their names travelling through the forest and camping at a new spot each night. Which added some life-changing experiences for me a nieve 17-18-year-old alone in a foreign country with me not knowing any part of the local language. When I got back to the UK I decided on this as a hopeful career path which I am still working toward now. I decided I wanted to work in the travel industry, where my passion in life truly lies. So I came back to the UK after that trip and immediately planned for other journeys. Still living with family I decided to explore a bit of Latin America which I really enjoyed the culture the idea of working out here was overwhelming. So in 2011, I went to Costa Rica. But where the trips truly took an expedition type feel was when planning from start to finish around 8 months prior to going away. I planned and prepared for a journey to the Darien gap Panama-Colombia border region. Which went as best as could in this region. I then began planning my return to head to Guyana where we canoed a river we, meaning myself 2 local guides travelled for 11.5 days and travelled 288km to be exact. I knew that my dream job would now be to work as an expedition leader where I could live out my passion for leading in remote and exciting places. I now had an abundance of remote travel experience and the required knowledge and soon the qualifications that it takes to do this. But I was still without the valuable experience required to teach and lead people in remote places. I have now done my ML training so that I would soon have the qualification to make this a career choice of mine.

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