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The Path Ahead
Training Roadmap
Training does not end with a single course. Frontier Discipline is building a progression of advanced instruction, integrated field exercises, and expeditions designed to help students continually develop competence, confidence, and capability.
Frontier Discipline is committed to continually expanding its training offerings. The courses below represent future areas of instruction currently under development.
Students who complete foundational courses will have opportunities to pursue more advanced and specialized training as Frontier Discipline grows.
Planned Courses
Land Navigation II
Night Navigation
Field Communications II
Vehicle Navigation & Route Planning
Rappelling & Vertical Mobility
River Crossing & Water Movement
Expedition Planning & Logistics
Advanced Bushcraft & Fieldcraft
Civilian Rifle Team II
Integrated Field Exercise
Frontier Qualification Program
Future course offerings and timelines are subject to change based on student interest, instructor availability, facility requirements, and organizational development.
Frontier Applied Field Operations Program
The Frontier Applied Field Operations Program represents the integration of the Frontier Discipline curriculum into a series of advanced multi-day field events.
These exercises are designed to combine and validate the skills developed throughout training, including communications, medical response, navigation, fieldcraft, team coordination, logistics, leadership, and problem-solving.
Participants may be required to travel by foot, vehicle, or watercraft while accomplishing objectives, managing resources, establishing communications, responding to emergencies, navigating unfamiliar terrain, and adapting to changing conditions.
Events may incorporate day and night operations, field living, route planning, cache recovery, communication disruptions, casualty scenarios, transportation challenges, and other practical problems requiring coordinated solutions.
The purpose is not competition. The purpose is integration.
As Frontier Discipline continues to grow, the Frontier Applied Field Operations Program will serve as the bridge between individual courses and future expeditions, remote excursions, and exploration-based events.
Students who complete these programs should leave with greater confidence in their abilities, a deeper understanding of their strengths and weaknesses, and the experience necessary to become an asset to their team, community, and fellow explorers.
Training Roadmap
Training does not end with a single course. Frontier Discipline is building a progression of advanced instruction, integrated field exercises, and expeditions designed to help students continually develop competence, confidence, and capability.
Frontier Discipline is committed to continually expanding its training offerings. The courses below represent future areas of instruction currently under development.
Students who complete foundational courses will have opportunities to pursue more advanced and specialized training as Frontier Discipline grows.
Planned Courses
Land Navigation II
Night Navigation
Field Communications II
Vehicle Navigation & Route Planning
Rappelling & Vertical Mobility
River Crossing & Water Movement
Expedition Planning & Logistics
Advanced Bushcraft & Fieldcraft
Civilian Rifle Team II
Integrated Field Exercise
Frontier Qualification Program
Future course offerings and timelines are subject to change based on student interest, instructor availability, facility requirements, and organizational development.
Frontier Applied Field Operations Program
The Frontier Applied Field Operations Program represents the integration of the Frontier Discipline curriculum into a series of advanced multi-day field events.
These exercises are designed to combine and validate the skills developed throughout training, including communications, medical response, navigation, fieldcraft, team coordination, logistics, leadership, and problem-solving.
Participants may be required to travel by foot, vehicle, or watercraft while accomplishing objectives, managing resources, establishing communications, responding to emergencies, navigating unfamiliar terrain, and adapting to changing conditions.
Events may incorporate day and night operations, field living, route planning, cache recovery, communication disruptions, casualty scenarios, transportation challenges, and other practical problems requiring coordinated solutions.
The purpose is not competition. The purpose is integration.
As Frontier Discipline continues to grow, the Frontier Applied Field Operations Program will serve as the bridge between individual courses and future expeditions, remote excursions, and exploration-based events.
Students who complete these programs should leave with greater confidence in their abilities, a deeper understanding of their strengths and weaknesses, and the experience necessary to become an asset to their team, community, and fellow explorers.