Aggressive Behaviour Management — for knowledge and self-study only
Stafferin publishes the Aggressive Behaviour Management material as a self-study educational resource for security professionals. Every lesson is backed by published references — federal and provincial statutes, regulations, CCOHS, OSHA, NFPA codes, MTO Book 7, Criminal Code provisions, and other authoritative sources cited inline so you can verify the underlying material at any time.
- Knowledge only — not legal, medical, or operational advice. The content does not create any obligation, guarantee, or liability on Stafferin, its officers, employees, or affiliates. Nothing here replaces an accredited classroom course, a licensed instructor, an employer's site-specific training program, or a formal certification body (Red Cross, St. John Ambulance, Lifesaving Society, Ministry-approved security guard training, MTO TCP, and similar).
- Talk to your training instructor for any questions. Course-specific scenarios, edge cases, employer policies, and judgement calls should be directed to your accredited training instructor or supervising officer — not to this self-study material.
- References back every claim. Each lesson cites the regulation, standard, code section, or peer-reviewed source it draws from. We encourage you to follow the citations and read the originals in their authoritative form.
- Spotted a discrepancy? Regulations and standards evolve. If you find an error, an outdated citation, or a passage that conflicts with current law, please email us — we will gladly review and update the material.
Questions, corrections, or feedback: hr@stafferin.com · By using this course you acknowledge that the material is informational and that you remain responsible for your own training, certification, and on-the-job decisions.
Aggressive Behaviour Management
35-question examination · Pass mark: 70% (24 of 35)
This examination covers the escalation continuum, pre-attack indicators, LEAPS de-escalation, Criminal Code authority, two-officer restraint geometry, positional asphyxia, and use-of-force report writing.
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