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Central Nine Fire & EMS

1999 US-31, Greenwood, United States
High School

Description

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C9 is a career / technical school with numerous programs including Firefighter I/II and Emergency Medical Technician.  Central Nine Career Center is an area career/technical school dedicated to the development of the knowledge and skills necessary to prepare students for employment in a chosen career and/or furthering their education at a post-secondary institution. Central Nine provides career and technical education for a geographic area that encompasses all of Johnson County, the southeast township of Morgan County, and a main portion of the southern third of Marion County including students transported to those districts from the Indianapolis Metropolitan area. The school serves eight school corporations, which send students from nine high schools. Those high schools are: Beech Grove High School, Center Grove High School, Franklin Central High School, Franklin Community High School, Greenwood High School, Indian Creek High School, Perry Meridian High School, Southport High School, and Whiteland Community High School. The doors to Central Nine opened in the fall of 1972 after a feasibility study was initiated in August, 1969. The school now consists of seven buildings including approximately 125,032 square feet of classrooms, laboratories, offices, and other instructional resource facilities on 65 acres.

Vision Statement
Closing GAPS for Today, Tomorrow, & the Future: Skills Matter!
GROW * ACHIEVE * PREPARE * SUCCEED

https://www.facebook.com/Central9/timeline

RECENT FACEBOOK POSTS

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New Video Explains the Importance of EMS Data Collection and Use The Office of EMS recently released a two-minute video that shows how EMS data is used to improve EMS systems and patient care at the local, state and national levels. You may have already seen it on EMS.gov or our YouTube page, or mentioned in our latest EMS Update newsletter. It's important that every member of our profession understands the vital role that data and information can play in improving the safety and effectiveness of EMS. It's the frontline providers caring for people every day who generate and collect this information - and the better they understand how it benefits their patients and communities, the better the quality of the data. Creating a culture of science and data in EMS takes a concerted effort by all of us. We need your help sharing this video and the message about data in order to reach the EMS workforce and our colleagues across the nation. Please share this video in a new employee orientation, a continuing education course, or through an agency newsletter or website. We created it as a resource and educational tool and encourage you to download it, post it on your social media or play it at a staff meeting. And as always, let us know if you have any questions or want to share with us the ways you are creating a culture of science and data in your EMS organization.

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A big thanks to our guest speakers (former students) today for talking to our current classes about their accomplishments in public safety in just two short years. We hope to make this an annual event, so watch for it next year around Thanksgiving! Thank you to: Tyler Swardson ~ ISP Dispatcher Alex Pankoke ~ Greenwood FD & Needham FD Morgan Brannon ~ Homeland Security Management (IUPUI) Deja Craig ~ Criminal Justice (IUPUI)

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Would you be willing to train for an RTF?

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Congrats to Kevin James on his IMPD Graduation. C9 is proud of you🚔🚔🚔🚔🚔🚔🚔🚔🚔🚔🚔🚔🚔🚔🚔🚔🚔🚔

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Quiz