I think that's the class I took from him a year or two ago. 2-day class, Sat. AM was classroom, break for lunch, Sat. afternoon on the range then Sun. on range both before and after lunch, with the afternoon ending a bit earlier than on Sat.
It is a very basic class, but with no prereqs we had people ranging from a woman who I think had never fired her gun before the class to a guy I think had worked as part of a protection detail. Most were the "been shooting for years, but never learned how to fight with a gun" type (like me). Ken did a good job of making sure everybody was up to speed before going on, which made the class feel slow for those of us with a little background.
The classroom part covered safety and range procedures, then some discussion of the combat mindset, color codes of awareness, and a fairly extensive overview of the different types of actions and their strengths and weaknesses and also holsters and their strengths and weaknesses. There was some lecture at the range break area about home defense, open vs. concealed, use-of-force, etc.
Range work started at 2-3 yds and backed out to about 10 yds I think. Nothing long or really hard--this is a beginner class and the idea is to instill confidence, not scare off the newbies. He began with the basics of sight alignment and trigger press until we were getting good groups slow-fire. Then we moved on to presentations from the holster, multiple shots, reloads, etc. He also covered malfunction drills, which was the most useful for me since I'd never really learned them. I don't think we did any shooting while moving. We walked through everything dry several times before moving on to live fire.
He ran a hot range and after he covered reloads it was up to you to keep the gun stoked. If you started a 3-round drill with 1 in the gun, that was your problem. He teaches Weaver, and he explains why, but he doesn't get mad if you chose to do it differently, as long as you can explain why. (After I switched to my revolver after my 9mm broke I did my reloads with the opposite hand from what he recommends, because of how I carry the speedloaders. He asked if I was going to do it my way, I said yes, and he said OK.)
We had two relays, so half the class was shooting and half was reloading mags and staying hydrated. Round count was pretty low. IIRC he said bring 400 and I think I came home with about half of it. So there was plenty of time to visit with the other members of your relay after your mags were loaded, but I barely met the other relay.
Sunday ended with policing for brass. He said you could pick up your own, but he trades the brass for training ammo for the dept. so consider your brass donated to the cause. (I don't think I found more than a dozen of my brass anyway.) IIRC he required factory-loaded ammo. He provided water both days, so you don't have to worry about that. 3 mags are enough, though more is always better.