OSHA 10
General Industry Safety
This course has 12 lessons, with the 12th lesson being a final exam; each lesson has required labs and an exam. You will have 3 attempts to score a minimum of 70% on each lesson exam, as well as the final exam. The final exam is cumulative and will cover material from the entire course.
This course will take users approximately 10 hours, with a maximum allotment of 7.5 hours per day. As a result, this course must be delivered over a minimum of two days.
This course is intended for all employees. OSHA recommends Outreach Training Program courses as an orientation to occupational safety and health for workers. Workers must receive additional training, when required by OSHA standards, on the specific hazards of the job.
Course topics include: Introduction to OSHA, Walking Working Surfaces, Workplace Fires and Emergencies, Electrical Safety, Personal Protective Equipment (PPE), GHS Hazard Communication, Bloodborne Pathogens, Permit-Required Confined Spaces, Lockout/Tagout, and Forklift Safety.
Competitively priced at $79.
OSHA 10
Construction Safety
This course has 13 lessons, with the 13th lesson being the final exam; each lesson has required labs and an exam. You will have 3 attempts to score a minimum of 70% on each lesson exam, as well as the final exam. The final exam is cumulative and will cover material from the entire course.
This course will take users approximately 10 hours, with a maximum allotment of 7.5 hours per day. As a result, this course must be delivered over a minimum of two days.
This course is intended for construction workers and supervisors, and anyone involved in the construction industry. OSHA recommends Outreach Training Program courses as an orientation to occupational safety and health for workers. Workers must receive additional training, when required by OSHA standards, on the specific hazards of the job.
Course topics include: Introduction to OSHA, Struck and Caught Hazards, Electrical Safety, Fall Protection, Ladder Safety, Excavation Safety, Scaffold Safety, Materials Handling, Crane Safety, Personal Protective Equipment (PPE), and Permit-Required Confined Space Entry.
Competitively priced at $79.
OSHA 30
Construction Safety
This course has 27 lessons, with the 27th lesson being a final exam; each lesson has required labs and an exam. You will have 3 attempts to score a minimum of 70% on each lesson exam, as well as the final exam. The final exam is cumulative and will cover material from the entire course.
This course will take users approximately 30 hours, with a maximum allotment of 7.5 hours per day. As a result, this course must be delivered over a minimum of four days.
This course is intended for construction workers and supervisors, and anyone involved in the construction industry. OSHA recommends Outreach Training Program courses as an orientation to occupational safety and health for workers. Workers must receive additional training, when required by OSHA standards, on the specific hazards of the job.
Course topics include: Introduction to OSHA, Managing Safety and Health, Struck and Caught Hazards, Personal Protective Equipment (PPE), Hearing Conservation, Respiratory Protection, Lead and Crystalline Silica, Asbestos, GHS Hazard Communication, Electrical Safety, Hand and Power Tools, Fall Protection, Ladder Safety, Excavations, Scaffolds, Crane Safety, Heavy Equipment, Forklift Safety, Materials Handling, Permit-Required Confined Spaces, Fire Safety, Welding and Cutting, Concrete and Masonry, Steel Erection, and Ergonomics.
Competitively priced at $169.
At At-Leisure Contractor Licensing, we know that nothing is more important than safety on the job. That’s why it’s critical to ensure your employees have the qualified training, and the OSHA certification, they need to work safely—while getting the job done right in a timely and professional manner.
Traditionally, this kind of training is thorough, but can also be time consuming. That’s where At-Leisure comes in. At-Leisure offers you access to approved online OSHA courses that are authorized and certified—along with world-class customer support—which you and your employees can access anytime that is convenient.
Our competitively priced web-based OSHA training programs give you the flexibility to register as an individual or a group, which allows you to monitor employee progress. You also have the versatility to choose from two different 10-hour OSHA courses or a 30-hour OSHA course, each of which covers comprehensive topics.
At-Leisure’s Authorized OSHA online training courses equips your employees with the OSHA training and confidence they need, while helping you build a safer, more productive workforce.
This course has these features and more.
- Multimedia
- Narration
- Interactivity
- Easy navigation
- Supplementary material
- Links to regulations
- Real-world scenarios
- Objective-based exams
- Continuing Education Units
After taking this course, you will be able to:
- Explain the importance of OSHA in providing a safe and healthful workplace to workers covered by OSHA
- Apply the OSHA regulations for walking and working surfaces to avoid slips, trips, and falls in the workplace, and recognize safe work practices for installing, maintaining, and using stairs, ladders, and scaffolds
- Explain the OSHA requirements for exit routes and Emergency Action plans and describe OSHA requirements for Fire Prevention plans and portable fire extinguishers
- Identify safe work practices around electricity, including understanding electrical terms, basic electrical safety principles, and regulations which pertain to electrical safety
- Select a variety of PPE based on a workplace evaluation and the types of hazards, and take responsibility for correctly fitting, maintaining, and using personal protective equipment
- Identify the elements of the Hazard Communication Standard, identify physical and health hazards of chemicals included on a Hazardous Chemical Inventory, recognize the information required on Safety Data Sheets (SDS) and warning labels, as well as how they are used and maintained, and the meaning of pictograms, under the Globally Harmonized System (GHS), and identify training program requirements
- Identify bloodborne pathogens and common symptoms, and list engineering and work practice control measures that protect employees against exposure to bloodborne pathogens
- Identify a confined space, its hazards, requirements for confined spaces as listed under the Permit-Required Confined Spaces Standard, and duties and responsibilities of confined space workers
- Identify hazardous energy sources and use appropriate energy-isolating devices, and describe the procedures for conducting a lockout/tagout
- Recognize safe operating procedures for forklifts, workplace hazards, and how to handle special types of forklifts.
After taking this course, you will be able to:
- Recognize the importance of OSHA in providing a safe and healthful workplace to workers covered by OSHA
- Identify struck-by and caught-in or caught-between hazards associated with serious construction-related injuries
- Identify safe work practices around electricity, including understanding electrical terms, basic electrical safety principles, and regulations which pertain to electrical safety
- Recognize the dangers involved in excavations and how to take responsibility and work safely around trenches and excavations
- Identify types of fall hazards and how to prevent falls in your work environment by using appropriate fall protection
- Identify the crane safety requirements for the construction industry, and explain how to avoid accidents and identify hazards when working on or around cranes
- Recognize ladder hazards and ladder-related injuries and how to select, inspect, and maintain ladders
- Identify how to properly use, maintain, store, and dispose of materials including safe operation of cranes, rigging, and mechanical equipment
- Identify a confined space, its hazards, requirements for confined spaces as listed under the Confined Spaces in Construction Standard, and duties and responsibilities of confined space workers
- Select a variety of PPE based on a workplace evaluation and types of hazards
- Recognize types of scaffolds and how to safely use them.
After taking this course, you will be able to:
- Explain the importance of OSHA in providing a safe and healthful workplace to workers covered by OSHA
- Recognize how management plays a role to create a healthy and safe work environment through safety and health programs, worksite analysis to identify potential hazards on site, and levels of controls used to control exposure to hazardous materials and situations
- Identify the struck-by and caught-in or caught-between hazards associated with serious construction-related injuries
- Recognize the appropriate PPE to use based on a workplace evaluation and the types of hazards present
- Identify the appropriate hearing protection for your workplace based on the hazards of excessive noise, the types of noise, the results of a noise-monitoring program, and the OSHA rules for hearing protection
- Identify the appropriate respiratory protection for your workplace based on the types of airborne contaminants, the functions of different respirators, and the OSHA rules for respiratory protection
- Identify hazards posed by lead and crystalline silica in construction and how to control and avoid them
- Recognize the hazards of asbestos and identify ways to stay safe as you work in and around asbestos, including monitoring, communication, training, medical surveillance, PPE, and engineering controls
- Identify the elements of the Hazard Communication Standard, identify physical and health hazards of chemicals included on a Hazardous Chemical Inventory, recognize the information required on Safety Data Sheets (SDS) and warning labels, as well as how they are used and maintained, and the meaning of pictograms, under the Globally Harmonized System (GHS), and identify training program requirements
- Identify safe work practices for electricity, including recognizing electrical terms, basic electrical safety principles, and electrical safety regulations
- Recognize the safety hazards associated with non-powered hand tools and identify hazards related to powered hand tools
- Recognize types of fall hazards and how to prevent falls in your work environment by using appropriate fall protection
- Recognize ladder hazards, types of ladder-related injuries, and how to select, inspect, and maintain ladders
- Identify the dangers involved in excavations and the safe work practices for employees working in or near trenches and excavations
- Recognize the types of scaffolds and how to safely use them
- Identify the safety requirements for working with or near cranes, including how to avoid accidents and how to recognize hazards
- Recognize the safe work practices for working with or near heavy equipment
- Recognize safe operating procedures for forklifts, workplace hazards, and how to handle special types of forklifts
- Identify how to properly use, maintain, store, and dispose of materials
- Identify a confined space, its hazards, the OSHA requirements for confined spaces, and the duties and responsibilities of confined space workers
- Identify methods of fire prevention and describe OSHA requirements for fire protection
- Outline the general safety requirements for welding and cutting and list the safety precautions
- Identify the OSHA safety requirements for construction operations involving concrete and masonry
- Recognize the OSHA safety requirements for steel erection activities
- Recognize the role ergonomics plays in helping construction workers avoid work-related MSDs and identify how to avoid on-the-job injury when performing different types of activities.
Upon completion of this course, students will receive a certificate of completion which is good for 90 days. About 4-6 weeks after completion, your OSHA approved card will be delivered to you by mail.
- OSHA also defines Program Jurisdiction Restrictions. Outreach Training Programs are limited to OSHA Jurisdiction only. Student course completion cards can only be issued for students within U.S. jurisdiction (the 50 States and certain U.S. Territories).
- You must complete this training within 180 days.
"At-Leisure" is proud to be partnered with industry-leading AdvanceOnline Solutions, Inc., an OSHA-Authorized Online Outreach Training Provider, to providing training programs to keep your employees safe on the job. OSHA courses will be completed on a third-party site (AdvanceOnline Solutions) which will open in a separate window.
In short, there are only a handful of OSHA approved courses available online for the entire country, though, hundreds of companies offering an online option. The majority of these options are re-directing you to one of these approved online courses. That being said, once being redirected, its required you complete the course on the third-party site.
We have chosen to work with AdvanceOnline because they are competitively priced and their system is most similar to "At-Leisure", whereby you can register as and individual or as a group. Registering as a group will allow you to monitor employee progress.