Knowledge Tests Sample Clauses

A Knowledge Tests clause defines how a party’s knowledge is assessed or imputed for the purposes of representations, warranties, or obligations in a contract. Typically, it specifies whether knowledge is limited to what certain individuals actually know, or if it includes what they should have known after reasonable inquiry. For example, it may state that only the knowledge of senior management is relevant, or that knowledge includes facts that would have been discovered through due diligence. This clause ensures clarity and fairness by setting clear boundaries on whose knowledge is relevant, thereby allocating risk and preventing disputes over what a party "should have known."
Knowledge Tests. The Training Guides shall include tests (“Knowledge Tests”) which may be used to improve comprehension of the subject matter. The Training Guides and Knowledge Tests are tied to the Operator Qualification and Progression programs at the Existing Facility. Knowledge Tests and/or their contents are not published to maintain their integrity as a comprehension measurement.
Knowledge Tests. For some classes, particularly the major classes concerning use of force and force reporting in the Fall 2017 in-service training, PPB utilized individualized, written examinations. As COCL notes, PPB was able to administer the examinations via links PPB sent to each student’s Bureau-issued iPhone. See 2017 COCL Rep. at 54. PPB sent the links at the end of classes and instructed officers not to share the information, thus controlling confidentiality of the examination from future test takers. DOJ representatives observed some testing and reviewed results, which PPB was able to produce almost immediately. All students successfully passed the examination. PPB reports that 841 of the students who attended the spring 2017 in-service training passed the written examination on CEW. See 2016 In-Service Training Evaluation Results, at 18-19. A handful of students either had already taken the same examination or still had to take the examination as of the date of PPB’s report. Id. The Bureau’s vendor, Taser, provided the examination as a means of certification for the Taser X2 model, to which PPB transitioned. PPB should ensure that any outside vendor examination does not conflict with PPB’s force policies, revised since that in-service training. See Directive 1010.00-Force, revised July 21, 2017.