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OPOTA — getting ready for the physical and written at the same time

by derek_v 900 views5 replies
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derek_vOP
May 25, 2026

Starting my OPOTA process next month. I know the academy covers both written academics and physical fitness standards, and I'm trying to build a prep routine that addresses both without burning out before day one.

The written side includes law, constitutional standards, criminal procedure, report writing, and some psychology of policing content. I'm going through Ohio Revised Code sections that get tested and taking notes — there's a lot to internalize and the specifics matter.

Physical standards for Ohio are the 1.5-mile run, situps, pushups, and 300-meter sprint. My run time right now is about 14:30 which I know needs to get under 14:00 for most agencies. Working on it 4 days a week.

For those who've gone through an OPOTA-certified academy, how intense is the academic workload? I want to know if I should be studying more material before I start or if they teach everything you need to know during the program itself.

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rashid_c
May 26, 2026

14:30 is fine as a starting point. Most academies want to see consistent improvement, not perfection from day one. Get it under 13:45 before you start and you'll feel confident. The sprint and pushups matter too — don't neglect upper body.

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brett_l
May 27, 2026

They teach the material during the academy, but the pace is fast and they expect you to retain it. Going in with familiarity on the law content — especially Fourth Amendment, use of force, and Terry stops — will reduce your stress level significantly.

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priya_s
May 27, 2026

Criminal procedure is the heaviest academic content in most Ohio academies. Miranda, search and seizure, warrantless exceptions — know these cold before you start. They're tested repeatedly and the margins for error in real application are zero.

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sophie_m
May 28, 2026

Report writing is tested throughout the academy, not just in a dedicated block. Practice writing clear, factual summaries now. The habit of using objective, specific language takes time to build and it shows up everywhere.

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StudyGrind22
June 23, 2026

Honestly, the thing that helped me most was treating the written and physical prep as separate sessions rather than trying to do both in one day. I'd do an hour of cardio in the morning, then hit the books at night when I wasn't gassed. The written stuff is a lot heavier than people expect, especially constitutional law and criminal procedure. I found this opota practice test pdf that helped me figure out exactly where my gaps were before day one, which saved me from wasting time studying stuff I already knew.

Don't underestimate the report writing section either. It wasn't hard but I didn't practice it enough and it slowed me down. Give yourself more time on that than you think you need. You'll be fine if you stay consistent and don't try to cram everything into the last two weeks.

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