OSHA 10-HOUR Construction
About Course
What Is OSHA 10-Hour Construction Training?
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.
Our 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.
What Makes Our OSHA 10-Hour Training Different?
Our new courses, launched in August of 2022, leverage state-of-the-art HTML5 programming for a rich media experience that is both more accessible across browsers and mobile-capable, allowing for upgraded speed and interactivity. This leading-edge design includes games and quizzes to motivate students, enhance retention, and increase participation.
What Is the OSHA 10-Hour Certification?
You may be surprised to hear that OSHA does not certify workers, meaning there’s actually no such thing as an OSHA certification. Instead, OSHA requires employers to train their employees in the specific safety and health aspects of their jobs.
That being said, the closest thing to OSHA certification is OSHA Outreach training, as passing their exam results in an official Department of Labor OSHA card.
Who Should Take OSHA 10-Hour Construction Online Industry Training?
This course is for entry-level employees doing construction work. Examples of construction jobs include carpenters, electricians, laborers, masons, plumbers, sheet metal workers, tile workers, and welders.
If you don’t work in construction but still need 10-hour OSHA online training, we have a separate general industry course.
International Accreditors for Continuing Education and Training (IACET) and offers IACET CEUs for its learning events that comply with the ANSI/IACET Continuing Education and Training Standard. IACET is recognized internationally as a standard development organization and accrediting body that promotes the quality of continuing education and training.
Course Content
INTRODUCTION TO OSHA VIDEO AND TEST
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Introduction to OSHA _ Workplace Safety 2017
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Intro to Osha Quiz