Determine what kind of course you want to set up, such as a public training course through a community college or a private training course independently run or associated with a trucking firm. This will guide what financing and resources you have available, what instructors you will have access to and what kind of CDL training you wish to offer, such as class A, class B or class C or additional certification, such as for school bus operation. You may need to arrange for practice vehicles and reserve classrooms and parking lots for range practice.
Choose your curriculum resources, including handbooks, manuals, review sheets and videos. Your core classroom curriculum should include topics like trip planning and map reading, familiarity with the vehicle including coupling and uncoupling (hitching), log keeping, vehicle inspection and customer service. Skills covered should include instruction in how to back up safely, turning, shifting, parking and docking.
Contact your state offices to learn what requirements you need to meet for certification or accreditation of your training program, the minimum CDL training requirements in your state and how to submit student certification paperwork once your training program has begun. Search your state's website to find out which department handles CDL training programs, often the Secretary of State office or the Department of Licensing. Be prepared to provide outlines for your classroom and driving instruction course, business identification numbers, what class of CDL you wish to offer, curriculum information and the total hours of the program.
Procure a CDL license or hire instructors who have CDL licenses so students who have earned CDL permits may log practice hours with CDL licensed driving instructors. This includes required hours of range and road practice driving after classroom requirements have been met.