Fair enough - I guess I mis-interpreted what you were saying a bit. There's on question that the courses should be different - obviously ambulance sare not pursuit vehicles - but they do drive in all types of conditions, and being forced to take evasive manuvers is far from unheard of, even in systems which attempt to reduce lights and siren use.
I am not at all a fan of the VFIC course (that's the course I took). That course (or at least the version I took) attempts to scare you into driving slowly (a noble goal, admittedly), but has next to zero material about the physics of driving, cornering, etc....I think they mentioned once that they "could" go into the physics of the best route along a curve, hugging the apex, curves which change radius partway through..etc...but they didn't.
The driving portion was a joke - you hit maybe 20 mph on the course, never get anywhere near the limits of the ambulance, do nothing on wet-tracks, with braking distances, cornering, etc. Most of the course is parking between cones, or low-speed close-quarters manuvering (again, a good thing, but insufficent). Paralell parking is a great skill...but is unlikely to save too many lives. I dont see that as sufficent.