Have you been part of or seen any other clinical programs? Why makes it "the best available"?
I "toured" three other medic schools before choosing on PERCOM. One was local, the another 3 hours away and the other a hybrid online course.
PERCOM had more emphasis on critical thinking and understanding what is happening in the body. All of the other schools didn't have near as much advanced study as PERCOM did. They focus heavily on advanced pharmacology understanding, cardiology understanding, and anatomy and physiology.
How do we learn that you ask? You write scholarly papers. A lot of them. I think in my medic program I wrote approximately 12 papers averaging about 15 pages each. All with sources from paramedic text, nursing text, mainly medical journals, and other advanced reference material.
They see you as a substitute emergency room physician on an ambulance, so they will attempt to education you like one.
Their clinical skills testing that they have for students goes beyond the scope of most medics will see in their lives. We where taught how to place Foley's, NG/OG tubes, and other skills that paramedics do not commonly get to do/see.
Acutal clinical time depends entirely where you go/work with them to get a contract. I choose a large urban/suburban EMS system for my ride along time (was amazing), and a Level II community/academic center in my home town for hospital time.