OSHA 10 Hour Construction Industry

OSHA 10 Hour Construction Industry – $75

If you work in construction, you need to know how to spot, avoid, and report the safety and health risks you encounter on a daily basis. Our OSHA Online Outreach Training for Construction ensures you understand how to navigate common job-site hazards so that you feel safe at work.

Additionally, the course will help you increase your knowledge about construction-specific safety measures under OSHA 29 CFR 1926.

For instance, our OSHA 10 Hour Training Course will teach you the best practices for safeguarding against the top causes of fatalities and accidents in construction. This online course covers how to prevent slipping, tripping, getting struck by an object, electrocution, and getting caught in between objects or machinery.

You should also have an understanding of your employer’s responsibility for workplace safety, as well as the rights OSHA gives you as a worker. That’s why you’ll learn how to file a complaint if your workplace isn’t living up to its safety obligations.

COURSE OBJECTIVES

The OSHA Construction Industry Outreach Training Program is intended to provide an entry-level construction worker’s general awareness on recognizing and preventing hazards on a construction site. OSHA recommends Outreach Training Program courses as an orientation to occupational safety and health for workers covered by OSHA 29 CFR 1926. Workers must receive additional training, when required by OSHA standards, on the specific hazards of the job. Upon successful completion of the course, participants will receive an OSHA Construction Outreach DOL course completion card within 2 weeks. 

  • Given OSHA historical events and current information, the student will be able to explain the importance of OSHA in providing a safe and healthful workplace to workers covered by OSHA.
  • Recognize OSHA Standards references applicable to specific hazardous conditions and practices (Introduction to OSHA Standards)
  • Recognize the aspects of 1926 Subpart C (General Safety and Health Provisions)
  • Implement preventative measures for accidents in their workplace (Subpart D – Occupational health and Environmental Controls)
  • Describe types of personal protective equipment (PPE), and the requirements for use in OSHA standards (Subpart E – Personal Protective Equipment)
  • Recognize the requirements for fire protection in the workplace (Subpart F – Fire Protection and Prevention)
  • Identify types of rigging equipment used to protect employees (Subpart H – Rigging; Subpart N – Cranes and Rigging)
  • Identify the critical health and safety hazards of welding and cutting in the construction industry (Subpart J – Welding and Cutting)
  • Identify common electrical hazards and related OSHA standards (Subpart K – Electrical Standards)
  • Understand the importance of scaffolding for workers in elevated workplaces (Subpart L – Scaffolding)
  • Implement measures for protecting workers and equipment from dangerous falls (Subpart M – Fall Protection)
  • Recognize the hazards associated with working in or around excavation sites (Subpart P – Excavations)
  • Identify the safety requirements necessary to protect workers around concrete and masonry jobs (Subpart Q – Concrete and Masonry)
  • Identify the precautions and hazards to protect workers using explosives or blasting agents (Subpart T – Demolition)
  • Protect workers who perform jobs on or around stairways or ladders at worksites (Subpart X – Stairways and Ladders)
  • List and describe the hazards and prevalence of confined spaces

Topics Covered:

  • Module 1: Introduction to OSHA
  • Module 2: OSHA Focus Four Hazards
  • Module 3: Personal Protective Equipment
  • Module 4: Health Hazards in Construction
  • Module 5: Stairways and Ladders
  • Module 6: Cranes, Derricks, Hoists, Elevators & Conveyors
  • Module 7: Excavations
  • Module 8: Materials Handling, Use and Disposal
  • Module 9: Scaffolds
  • Module 10: Tools ‐ Hand and Power

Course Information:

  • Validity of the outreach training program from the date of purchase (365 days or 1 year)
    • 6 months after the first launch; including the survey
  • Additionally, if all attempts on the final exam are exhausted, the course will no longer be able accessible
  • For OSHA Online Outreach training programs, students must adhere to the following:
    • Spend at least 600 minutes or 10 hours in the course. (10-hour general and construction courses)
    • Spend at least 1800 minutes or 30 hours in the course. (30-hour general and construction courses)
    • Only spend a maximum of 7 hours and 30 minutes on the course each day
    • Complete a survey evaluating the course upon completion
    • Pass all quizzes and the final exam with a score of at least 70% in three attempts or less before a certificate of completion can be issued
  • Only access the OSHA Outreach training within U.S. Jurisdiction
  • Spend the required time in the course curriculum before the course can be completed
  • Validate your identity throughout the learning event to successfully pass the course

OSHA Outreach courses are provided in partnership with 360training.com, an OSHA-authorized online Outreach Provider.

Trainer contact info- Jason Cole – OSHA Outreach Trainer. Jason Cole is our OSHA Instructor of Record. He is an OSHA-authorized Outreach Trainer for General Industry and Construction.

Hours of Operation for support are:

Monday through Friday 8 AM (CST) to 8 PM (CST)

Saturday Closed

Sunday Closed

10 and 30-hours English Outreach Programs:

Jason Cole

E: oshatrainer@360training.com

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