Unit 2: Module Overview: A Targeted Training Experience
Module Overview: A Targeted Training Experience
2.2 Enclosed Space Emergency Module: Mastering Decisions Under Duress
This module is a direct simulation of the escalating crisis in Case Study 1, but with a critical difference: the trainee is placed in the role of the potential rescuer, not the victim. This shift in perspective is designed to build the psychological resilience and procedural adherence needed to prevent a bad situation from becoming a fatal one. Figure 2 shows a screenshot from a scene in the enclosed space emergency module.
Figure 1:Screenshots from the wrist menu
Figure 2: Empty cargo hold as the location of the emergency training experience
Direct Link to Case Studies: This scenario recreates the precise moment of failure from Case Study 1—a crew member collapsing from oxygen deficiency. It directly confronts the trainee with the consequences of the initial procedural failures they learned about in the previous modules. The need for constant communication with the chief officer via radio and the reliance on the personal gas monitor are reinforced as critical lifelines, directly addressing the communication breakdown and lack of monitoring in the real-world incident.
Effectiveness through Experiential Learning Cycles: This module's effectiveness is best understood through Kolb's Experiential Learning Cycle. The trainee is rapidly pushed through all four stages:
Concrete Experience: The colleague collapses, and the timer starts. This is a visceral, emotionally charged event.
Reflective Observation: If the trainee fails, the "FAILED" screen forces them to stop and reflect on what went wrong. The debriefing session serves as a more structured form of this reflection, analysing the sequence of events.
Abstract Conceptualization: From this reflection, the trainee forms a new understanding of the principles involved—e.g., "I see now that alerting the bridge before approaching the victim is the critical first step."
Active Experimentation: The trainee then re-attempts the scenario, applying their new understanding to change their actions and achieve a successful outcome.
By compressing this entire learning cycle into a few minutes, the VR simulation creates an incredibly potent and memorable learning experience. It trains the user to manage the amygdala hijack the state of panic where rational thought is impaired by repeatedly and safely exposing them to its triggers. This is not just safety training; it is cognitive-emotional conditioning for high-stakes decision-making.