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Thread: Effective Training....

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    Council Member Infanteer's Avatar
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    Default Effective Training....

    First off, I've spent the last couple weeks reading many of the threads on this forum to ensure I've got a grasp of the debates and discussions that have already taken place. This is an impressive site with a high-level of discourse taking place.

    I'm starting this thread as opposed to continuing the discussion from where it came from to avoid sidetracking its pages of discussion on strategy. My question revolves around these statements:

    Quote Originally Posted by Ken White View Post
    - Around six to eight months of good training versus our current 16-18 week norm is needed for the enlisted entrant; about a year for new officers. That will make them good enough if it's done right --and any combat adds impetus and reinforcement to all things learned and accelerates the attainment of skill. Thus it take seven to ten years in peacetime to develop 'expertise' but in wartime that can be halved in light combat as now or accelerated even more in heavy combat. It took about 18-24 months in WW II to turn marginally trained folks into pretty competent soldiers. The naturals, about 10%, can do it in weeks in sustained combat.
    Quote Originally Posted by William F. Owen View Post
    I am my no means convinced the UK or US training infantry men in a way best suited to the needs. Does it work. Yes, but how well compared to other approaches we don't know.
    There is alot of focus on how to optimize unit organization in some of these threads, but I have a feeling that organization takes backseat to training. Now, I've read the idea of PBID and such things as Wagram's ideas on training but I've yet to get a sense for the specifics that many are advocating as solutions to the problems alluded to above. Are our training systems "barely post-conscript" (to quote Mr Owen)? If so, what about them is archaic? What constitutes "the basics" that would constitute effective training for a capable soldier and how should it be taught?

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    Council Member Ken White's Avatar
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    Default Fair question but I'll have to answer my portion tomorrow.

    With your permission...

    Mostly 'cause I'm not awake enough to do it right.

    Wilf will probably be along in a bit. Afternoon there...

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    Council Member William F. Owen's Avatar
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    Default Ken's uncanny level of fore telling!

    Quote Originally Posted by Infanteer View Post
    Are our training systems "barely post-conscript" (to quote Mr Owen)? If so, what about them is archaic? What constitutes "the basics" that would constitute effective training for a capable soldier and how should it be taught?
    First off, excellent question, and yes, I need to have me feet held to the fire here. I do have great deal written on this subject, but have yet to mould it into a coherent form. But....

    1. We need to focus more on a useful and defined level of individual skill and knowledge.
    2. You can't train for every condition and for every type of conflict, so it has to be explicit in training that you are providing a basis for further training, that as yet, may be unforeseen - and yet "lessons learned" keep getting re-learnt.
    3. We engage in a lot of superfluous process and procedures. Certain things at the squad an platoon level could be usefully simplified. Other things need to added.
    4. We don't seem to understand some of the basics, (fitness, marksmanship, navigation etc.) to the extent that we can define the standard and then concentrate on how we achieve the standard - run 2 miles in 18 minutes carrying 22kg - how you get that standard, does not matter. It just has to be done within time and budget.


    Now I can cite numerous cases of dissonance that I have either experienced or witnessed, but that's not really my point. My point is that we seem/may not to have as good understand of what is actually required, as we think.
    Infinity Journal "I don't care if this works in practice. I want to see it work in theory!"

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    - If we can double the ratio of kills per contact, we will soon put an end to the shooting in Malaya.
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    Default I assume you are discussing basic training...

    and initial entry training. The US Army (my background) does indeed have a third wave, industrial approach to basic/AIT. I think we actually do a fair job of turning civilians into soldiers, but it is pretty much the same approach used during the two global wars: A small number of trainers with relatively limited resources use the assembly line approach to produce soldiers with a specified skill set. These are then fowarded to units where they have to have additional training before they are fully qualified. The training involves three major areas:

    Socialization
    Physical Fitness
    Military skill (over 240 discrete skills for a Cavalry Scout, for instance: map reading, marksmanship, hand grenades, etc)

    What is the problem with this logical, ordered approach to basic training? It is three-fold:

    1. Trainer to trained ratio is too high. In some cases this is not a big problem. One man can train 100 men in physical fitness about as well as he can train 10. He can't do the same in, say, rifle marksmanship. As a result, a huge amount of the recruit's time is spent sitting around, waiting his turn on the range, or with the radio, or for his turn in the simulator. It is also harder for the trainers to detect and correct individuals having problems.
    2. Training to the lowest possible standard. There is virtually no scope for allowing talented soldiers to learn at a faster pace. Budding SGT Rocks are kept back and forced to keep pace with all the Sad Sacks in their group. About the only area where they can get ahead is physical training. Again, this is partly due to a lack of resources dedicated to basic training, and also to the industrial training model, which values mass production over nurturing.
    3. The system is ossified. When I left the basic training arena in 2002, we were still training recruits on React to Nuclear Explosion. We were not training them on many of the skills that would become important in Iraq and Afghanistan. Deleting or adding a task in the basic skill set took a minimum of two years to work its way through the various TRADOC hoops. Oh, we did what we could; we cobbled together a 'booby trap' lane, for instance, but on our own time and with resources we could scrape together.

    The solution is not hard to imagine. We have more than enough motivated, talented NCOs to train recruits; they know how to train and what to train; they know what you need to train; they know how to turn lardies into studs; they know how to motivate and socialize. Imagine Gunny Highway back from Iraq for a two year tour as a basic trainer. Every four months he is handed 12 recruits and told to produce a ten-man infantry squad he would be willing to take into combat. He has access to all the equipment they would need and sufficient land and range time. He has sole authority to drop soldiers from training or recycle them. At graduation he determines what rank the soldier deserves, up to E-4. Something like that would work.

    Here are the problems:

    1. This would require a huge increase in the number of high-quality soldiers dedicated to training. The industrial model was chosen, after all, because it allowed for the smallest possible investment in trainers and training resources - efficiency, not effectiveness.
    2. There would be some spectacular failures. When you decentralize the operation as depicted, there will be a small percentage of trainers who will turn out to be lazy, unproductive, sadistic, or simply crap. Some of these failures will involve dead, injured, or abused soldiers, along with varying degrees of property damage. Some, inevitably, will be highly publicized.

    Bottom line is we will not improve basic training until we invest a great deal more resources in it and are willing to accept risk and the inevitable failures. I don't think it is a question of some new approach to training per se.

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    Council Member William F. Owen's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Eden View Post
    Bottom line is we will not improve basic training until we invest a great deal more resources in it and are willing to accept risk and the inevitable failures. I don't think it is a question of some new approach to training per se.
    Well OK, but given that very few if any armies have ever run comparative training studies, and even when they have, have failed to learn from them, we don't have any good data to base that assumption on - However, I think what you say is largely correct.

    Problem is, basic training is not actually basic training. Since about 1915, it's been a ready made solider factory. You go from training to war. You join your unit, in combat!
    As far as I have ascertained, only the Germans sent back experienced NCOs and Officers and bolted together new platoons in training and then deployed those platoons into combat, - as platoons, or squads.
    The question I always want to ask, is that, if men posted to your unit, were just well trained in individual skills, - physically fit, could map read, call in fire, had good marksmanship, CQB shooting skills, weapons handling and field craft, plus basic medic, etc, etc. - could you teach him the rest, as part of a platoon, before it was time to deploy?
    Infinity Journal "I don't care if this works in practice. I want to see it work in theory!"

    - The job of the British Army out here is to kill or capture Communist Terrorists in Malaya.
    - If we can double the ratio of kills per contact, we will soon put an end to the shooting in Malaya.
    Sir Gerald Templer, foreword to the "Conduct of Anti-Terrorist Operations in Malaya," 1958 Edition

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    Default Ahhh....COHORT

    Wilf, now you are talking about something different. The US Army COHORT program had cadres training recruits and then the whole unit was shipped off to a parent battalion - so that you had a unit that had gone from basic training to (possibly) war as a single entity. They typically stayed together for for three years and, in my limited experience with them, were better units than those that used the normal individual rotation system.

    Problem was, the US Army personnel system couldn't handle the change and a very promising system was abandoned. I'm all for depot battalions and regimental systems and unit cohesion, but that type of change is unlikely to arise absent some existential national emergency.

    But we could, I believe, fairly easily improve the state of individual entry training - basic skills training - and make it easier for units in the field to integrate individual replacements even in wartime - If we devote more resources to the effort.

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    Council Member Ken White's Avatar
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    Default Blame this on the Infanteer; he asked...

    Since I said we can and should do this better and the 'we' was the US -- most of the commonwealth countries do a better job than we do in my observation and experience -- I'll address it to us because though I think the principles broadly apply, each nation is different and the training regimen has to account for the entry demographics of the day in that nation.

    I agree with Wilf's and Eden's comments above. Both explain very well why we do what we do and Eden explains much that is wrong. He also raises very valid points that must be considered so let me first offer some suggestions to accommodate those.

    As he says, currently, a small number of trainers with relatively limited resources use the assembly line approach to produce soldiers with a specified skill set. These are then forwarded to units where they have to have additional training before they are fully qualified. There are two flaws with this approach which as he says is mobilization based. The first and quite obvious problem is that we need to be able to do that on a mobilization basis but we do not have to and should not do that now with a professional force.

    The second is that the process of selecting which tasks are trained in the schoolhouse and which get trained after arrival in the unit is very badly skewed -- tasks which are difficult or expensive to train or which will have high failure rates (and thus reflect poorly on the training institution...) are selected to be 'unit trained' (the schools and centers get to do the final selection...). Thus the first step is to rectify those two mistakes. Both are equally difficult but not impossible, the former due to costs, the second due to the need for constant changes in 'Tasks, Conditions and Standards' caused not by changes in warfare so much as by the fact that the Bureaucracy involved is largely Civil Service and job security entail doing 'work' -- even if it is not needed.

    The hurry up and wait syndrome can be largely eliminated with one measure. Adopt a Cadre system of Squad Trainers. For these trainers, hire recently retired NCOs on the same basis as used for Junior ROTC Cadet instruction; they draw their retired pay and the School pays the difference to bring their total compensation up to the level of not being retired. This contractual basis allows the selection and retention of good trainers (every NCO is far from that...), insistence refresher and update training, maintain a decent standard of fitness and appearance and so forth. They wear the uniform with all accoutrements and such plus a Drill Sergeant Hat in a different color. This will insure that most do not fall prey to the valid concerns expressed by Eden. You'll still not be error free but the number of personnel failures will be far smaller and you'll have continuity. These people need to be contracted to the Army as consultants and not as persons supplied by a Commercial organization.

    Talented soldiers must be moved to Squads moving at a faster pace. This will be exceedingly difficult as cries of discrimination and the like will surely result. Documentation should preclude any real trauma from this but it will still be a distractor that Commanders will seek to avoid.

    The system is slow to change because it has become highly bureaucratic and the Civilian employees involved have entirely too much say in what occurs. Their efforts to keep relatively soft and in many case not terribly productive jobs rules. This can be changed (but will be resisted. NOTE: I say this based on 18 years service as a DAC, starting as a GS 11 Instructor, Training developer and Branch Chief for seven years in TRADOC and ending up rather more senior and the supervisor of 50 plus military and a like number of civilian employees. I don't know everything but I do know sinecures, bureaucratic foolishness, make work and refusal to take responsibility when I see them. I also know how to fix them -- by eliminating positions... )

    Eden ended with this:
    "Bottom line is we will not improve basic training until we invest a great deal more resources in it and are willing to accept risk and the inevitable failures. I don't think it is a question of some new approach to training per se."
    He is totally correct. Those things are the cost of doing it right -- the option is to continue doing it wrong and getting a marginally trained Soldier that succeeds in spite of mediocre training because he's a good fit for the job.

    Among other things, a Squad Trainer approach as Eden and I suggest will allow the marginal recruit to be identified earlier and eliminated before the expense of training him and retaining him mounts. Better selectivity in recruiting helps but that still doesn't catch all the slackers -- no system will catch them all but a bunch of old NCOs working with ten or so Soldiers will enable most to be spotted very quickly; they can then be moved to a second or even to a third squad and if all the Cadre agree, he or she is history

    If you want a quality professional force, the old, mass production idea of any warm body has to go.

    So: What follows is an unconstrained answer to your question Note there is little new, only the trainer and the time really differ.

    Step 1. Adjust the training process to account for today's professional force and save the mobilization based process for when it is needed.

    Step 2. Convene a number of branch specific working groups of Company level officers and NCO -- no Field Grades, no Civilians, No 1SG/Co SGM/ Color Sgt and about four O, four NCO -- and determine a Basic Soldier Task list (generic) AND an Intermediate Soldier Task list (branch specific). Scrub the generic list with a second board of Co level O/NCO and produce a single desired list. Submit it to TRADOC for their Scrub and then appoint one -- only one -- non TRADOC GO as an arbitrator to produce a Basic list. The object of all that is to produce an accurate and not, as is currently true, a bureaucratically skewed and incomplete list of tasks for institutional training.

    Step 3. Restructure training along roughly these lines. To break the five day week attachment and emphasize the 'you're no longer a civilian' aspect, establish 10 day modules of nine work days and one day off.

    Module 1 - Barracks. Reception, processing, weapons issue, clothing and equipment issue, history and traditions, rules regulations and law, standards and admin. Regulatorily or other required social etc. classes, Care and cleaning of equipment (to include training, not expecting them to picj it up and do it right on their own), Daily PT including walking or marching everywhere (minimal close order drill [COD]; Fall in, Sling Arms, Port Arm, Inspection Arms, Left and Right face, column movements and no more; no shoulder arms, no flanking movements). No night training.

    Module 2 - Road march (~3-5km)to Hut Encampment, initial field training, individual movement, basic navigation (without map or compass) as a confidence builder, Familiarization firing issue weapon(first and last day), Weapon and equipment care and cleaning under fikled conditions (again training, not DS goof of time), First Aid/CLS (all), field sanitation, field fortifications. Daily PT, alternating a run (not for speed or time) and a no pack but with weapon and harness march every day at random times, increasing from an initial one Km by adding 500m per day ending 4.5 to 5 km (3 mi). No COD. 20% night or low vis training (without NVG).

    Module 3 - Road march (!4-6km) to new location, erection of tentage. 1/2 day on field living.Range period -- Known distance training followed by Field Firing/Trainfire etc. to include urban, semi urban, rural woodland and rural plains/desert settings. Entire time period; qualification on day nine followed by striking and turn in of tentage. No PT, No night training, concentration on weapon mastery. ~2 km road march to range and back with weapon and harness, no pack, no speed marches.

    Module 4 - Road march (~4-6km) to new location. Field shelter living, field cooking to include, field sanitation, land navigation to include a test, target detection, observation and reconnaissance techniques, scouting, familiarization firing (other weapons). More field care and manitencane training. Basic tracking and tracking avoidance, rural and urban. Survival preparatory training. Buildings away from bivouac area used for classes, some meals but not for sleeping. PT consisting of random time exercises daily plus alternating run and road march with pack starting at 1.5km and adding 500m per day, ending at 5km (3 mi). 30% night or low vis training, no NVG.

    Module 5 - Survival training, classes and preparation (2-3 days; PT only in this phase, exercise and easy timed run); Survival exercise (with pack and harness but no weapons or ammo; not an Escape and Evasion/SERE drill; two man teams directed; scattered drop off). Training phase 10-15% night, no NVG; Exercise 24 hours/Total of four or five days; pickup, return to garrison/barracks, clean up and maintenance. Yes, that's minimal and lets them learn enough to be dangerous -- better that than none and the combat arms guys get a second, harder dose later. Two day Training holiday, freedom of the post.

    Module 6 - Cross country march (~3-5km) to Field, draw and erect tentage. Team training, arbitrary teams forced to work together and to implement previous training. Field firing, fire control and fire discipline. Land navigation, calls for fire. PT daily, random times exercise with weapons plus random times [not necessarily concurrent with exercise]alternating run, road, and cross country march starting at 2.5km and adding 750m per day, ending at 7km (4.25 mi). 40-50% night or low vis, no NVG.

    To be continued...

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    Council Member Ken White's Avatar
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    Default Encyclpaedia Canadnsis Continued

    (I am not taking the rap for this tome...)

    Contd:

    Module 7 - Cross country march (~6-9km) to Hut Encampment. Issue and classes, NVG, laser pointers, etc. Squad movement, Squad tactics and exrecises, Field firing emphasizing fire discipline to include night live fire with and without NVG. Calls for fire. PT daily, random times exercise with weapons plus random times [not necessarily concurrent with exercise]alternating run, road, and cross country march starting at 3.5km and adding 750m per day, ending at 7km (4.25 mi). 25-40% night or low vis with and without NVG.

    Module 8 - Cross country march (~12km, speed march) to Barracks; two days cleanup and maintenance. Cross country march (< 5km, no speed) to test area, Four day performance test under Test NCOs (Active duty SGTs/Cpls f/ Canada [no higher grades other than one Captain OIC, one SSG/Sgt NCOIC]; Squad Cadre not allowed in test area. Test devised by test cadre and changed for each iteration using standard set of test modules. Test runs day and night, roughly 50% night. Return to barracks by vehicle, two days cleanup and maintenance.

    Module 9 - Abbreviated, three to five days. ASVAB retest, Admin processing, equipment maintenance and turn in.

    There you have it; 85 or so days, twelve [strikeout]seven[/strikeout] weeks -- and that should cull out most of the unmotivated and produce a basic soldier who should be prepared for the real training which follows. Recycles encouraged. All they'll do is learn more -- simply changing instructors can enhance learning of identical topics -- and the cost is minimal.

    For an infantryman, basically the same pattern, this time with Platoon cadre but small platoons of no more than 25 and a platoon cadre that mix the Retired guys on contract and active NCOs but no higher than SSG/MCpl (thus each can learn from the other -- ideally). The difference is that the modules are extended to 14 days, 9 or 10 to 12 working and 2 (minimum) to 4 (maximum and no more than once if at all) days off and that the same basic instruction is repeated but at an advanced level adding more sub tasks, skills and team training (2 man) instead of individual training is used early on using the coach and pupil method (to identify the high performers). Squad training also is introduced earlier, PT is an order of magnitude harder and night training with and without NVG, approaches 40% in total All firing is conducted at squad and platoon level except for some familiarization (other then issue weapon) firing and one four day block to allow another qualification for record (KD and field fire) with the issue weapon. This obviously provide some to much repetition in training subject dependent, something that is generally avoided now due to cost -- it's worth the extra money to embed and imprint good habits. All that training is Outcome Based, not rote and repetition tasks, conditions and standards stuff.

    I wouldn't want much more COD than I outlined for the Basic period; for those who think it's important, add it in the barracks phases of the follow on training. Thus Intermediate Infantry training is about 120 days, 17 weeks.

    The standard objections to all that are cost (to include the cost of tentage and the huts, not to mention the added ranges and ammo plus time and a few other things like more wear and tear on clothes and equpment), the vagaries of weather, and that many people will not be willing to enlist if they have to go through that.

    My responses to that are; You get what you pay for; Soldiering is an outdoor sport; if they aren't willing to do that to become part of a competent professional organization that challenges people instead of encouraging mediocrity, they probably aren't capable of going to war and surviving without falling apart and better to find out earlier than later -- plus, it will deter the faint of heart from enlisting thus saving a dollar or two...

    Eden said he was addressing Enlisted Initial Entry Training only, I did as well. However, I believe the Combat Arms Officer Basic Courses should replicate a combination of the above Basic and Intermediate training regimen (the same seven weeks should suffice for the individual effort, combining aspects of the enlisted Basic and Intermediate above) with only slight modification because those are basic skills better taught in an institutional setting than picked up by osmosis in a unit (and that new LT has to insure NCOs that work for him train their troops properly). In the institution you CAN have quality control; all units are not equal and will never be. The Intermediate OBC Phase would concentrate on Platoon tasks and would require, to do it right, about the same 17 weeks as the enlisted intermediate phase. I base this on watching and working a 9 to 12 week (it varies as Commanders cam and went... whims...) Armor Officer Basic Course do its thing over seven years at Knox -- that is just not enough time; we're being really unfair to those LTs -- and to their Troops...

    Even unfair to the taxpayers who are paying the bills and deserve a better, more competent product -- officer and enlisted.

    Obviously, the OBC students also require more garrison time for the really important things like Supply Officer, voting officer, etc. . Thus for the initial entry officer, about 7 weeks individual skills; 7 weeks garrison based admin and tactical training and 17 or so weeks in the field working on being a Platoon Leader -- and refining individual skills. Add a couple of weeks fore and aft for administrative processing and such and that hits about 35 weeks -- about 8 months. That's two months longer than the Marines Basic School now and one month less than it was years ago.

    All that can probably be done for the next 20 year at the cost of one Zumwalt...

    That's unconstrained -- you want a simpler less effective solution that costs less? Simply train people for two jobs higher than their theoretical next job -- almost all of them will serve in positions requiring that knowledge before they return to
    Last edited by Ken White; 08-08-2009 at 12:45 AM. Reason: Dumb Math error; 12 weeks basic / Caught by Kiwigrunt.

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    Council Member Kiwigrunt's Avatar
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    Wow Ken, that’s a very impressive layout. I like it.


    There you have it; 85 or so days, seven weeks….
    12 weeks?


    And just a thought:

    Recycles encouraged. All they'll do is learn more -- simply changing instructors can enhance learning of identical topics -- and the cost is minimal.
    Could almost be interesting to make it mandatory. If every intake has 50 % new and 50 % recycles, (in mixed buddy teams?) then that may give those recycles their first taste of leadership as well. Although that may negatively affect the individual training value of the newbie’s….hmmmm, and it may discourage the more talented and eager recycles and chuck it in….
    Last edited by Kiwigrunt; 08-08-2009 at 12:42 AM. Reason: da bad England
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    Council Member Ken White's Avatar
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    Default You know, I *thought* that looked wrong.

    Quote Originally Posted by Kiwigrunt View Post
    12 weeks?
    Yes it is indeed 12weeks. That 12 plus 17 weeks for Intermediate plus a couple weeks leave run you 31 weeks, seems like a longtime but I'm firmly convinced it would be worth it -- almost as convinced it'll never happen.

    For fun with numbers you can look at the number 85 and think "that's one more than 84 which is 12 sevens. So, seven weeks..." A mind is a terrible thing to waste.
    Could almost be interesting to make it mandatory. If every intake has 50 % new and 50 % recycles, (in mixed buddy teams?) then that may give those recycles their first taste of leadership as well...
    True...

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    Council Member Fuchs's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Eden View Post
    What is the problem with this logical, ordered approach to basic training? It is three-fold:

    1. Trainer to trained ratio is too high.
    2. Training to the lowest possible standard. There is virtually no scope for allowing talented soldiers to learn at a faster pace.
    1) That is a general resource problem. Civilian marksmanship training in a club is completely superior. Civilian fitness training is completely superior.

    A Kindergarten worker in Germany needs several years of training to take care of a few children.
    An army NCO gets a few weeks of trainer training before he's being sent to give recruits basic training.
    It's a sad joke.

    2) Different training/education speeds are rarely practiced anywhere. Germany has three parallel schools after 4th grade as one such example, but not everywhere. Only two of the three forms have an acceptable reputation. There's rarely a training/education system anywhere that does its job at different speeds.

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    i pwnd ur ooda loop selil's Avatar
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    Ken,

    I understand how you put that list together of topics for training, but how would you break it down into skills and learning objectives. In other words "shoot a rifle" becomes how many discrete learning objectives?

    By the way I know that is a HUGE list but that is what you need to build the curriculum.
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    Council Member Ken White's Avatar
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    Default That's already been done, Sam

    Quote Originally Posted by selil View Post
    In other words "shoot a rifle" becomes how many discrete learning objectives? ... By the way I know that is a HUGE list but that is what you need to build the curriculum.
    There are actually three separate sets of pretty well researched documents. The post-WW II Army Subject Schedules have extensive lists of training objectives and even times required to teach an average class (generally far too long but can be worked); Army Training Plans from the same era which do that same for some subjects.

    More current are today's Soldiers Manuals (LINK) which you'll notice cover ever MOS and skill level. Unfortunately, you'd need to log on to AKO to read any specific manual. However, that will show you how many there are.

    Here's one that allows let you look at the way each task is structured, LINK. There are literally tens if not hundreds of thousands of these task and that first link shows they are available effectively as a curriculum and list of learning objectives for each skill and rank, PVT through SGM

    That last one is to the common tasks that everyone in the Army is supposed to be able to perform to standard. If you scroll though them, you'll note that the quality is variable, I've seen some that were very well done, others that left much to be desired. Generally the more technical, the better because many of the generic military, non technical tasks are subjective in performance evaluation and thus leave some gaps.

    Using your example, one never just shoots a rifle (and I know that was just a hypothetical and that you know what follows) -- it is always done for a reason and that reason can affect the way you shoot. Thus what has to be done is to link the necessary sub task together to produce and combination of task (learning objective) that achieve the desired result, the Outcome.

    Thus what's needed is indeed a series of learning objectives that consolidate numerous tasks (Shooting, moving, communicating) into a working practical outcome. The flaw in the discrete Task method is it enables people to do the basics very well indeed -- but they have trouble combining skills to move to the journeyman level. What's required is not a curriculum but a program of instruction that is flexible, allows for rapid adjustment and modification, movement between class levels and melds skills starting at a very elementary level and progressively adds new skills and increased level of difficulty. It is training, not education. The old Army Subject Schedule approach produced the learning objectives (and a pretty good soldier) who was not particularly great at any task but could them all to an extent and didn't need a tremendous amount of training in the unit.

    The new approach creates a kid who is really very, very good at performing those tasks in which he is trained(for most MOS, only about 40% in the Institution) but he cannot combine them well and those tasks left (about 60%)to the unit to train get done with a very wide variance in success. Many of those tabbed out to the unit are combat critical. We still get pretty good soldiers but it is very much first line leader in his first unit dependent. Combine the two systems and your concerns are more than met.

    In the old days (Pre Viet Nam), it took about two to three years of peacetime service to produce a decently competent Infantryman. With the new system, my son and others tell me it takes about two to three years in peacetime to produce a decently competent Infantryman. In both cases, that can be significantly decreased by combat commitment, then it drops down to his initial training plus about three to six weeks of combat. However, in both war and peace that's too long. An additional three months of training in the basics can cut the combat time down to a few days and the peace time down to a few weeks (units are different than the training environment as you know).

  14. #14
    i pwnd ur ooda loop selil's Avatar
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    The issue you describe of aggregate skill attainment and near and far transference of skill is an issue across disciplines. There is a lot of literature discussing this topic. A few of the basics to acomplishing it are building model eliciting activities that force near transfer of knowledge. Skills attainment then can be measured. As an example when you move on foot to contact with the enemy does the soldier maintain situational awareness. Then when that same soldier moves to contact (gross example) with the enemy mounted in a tank do they maintain situational awareness. Situation changes, tactically different defensive posture, but similar cognitive consideration.

    The issue with transference is also related to incorrect scope of skills versus knowledge. In situations where curriculum manifests as skills attainment to much balanced on the skill, the ability to transfer that skill is not transferable cognitively to other tasks. Industrial age education programs (almost everything) are created unfairly balanced towards skills. In the examples I could read (I don't have AKO) though the learning objectives are there they are examples of discrete skills versus knowledge.

    If you wanted to increase adaptive learning outcomes and enhanced cognitive constructions (not just buzz words) then you need to have skill tasks unrelated to the primary task. As an example a model eliciting activity (I'm NOT an expert at these) would be to talk about plumbing and fixing leaks and then using that knowledge to patch up another bleeding soldier. These aren't easy to create. They do speed up skills attainment and deepen knowledge so it can be used creatively.
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    Council Member Ken White's Avatar
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    Default That's the problem in the old nutshell

    Quote Originally Posted by selil View Post
    ...Situation changes, tactically different defensive posture, but similar cognitive consideration.
    Biggest single problem with the current system. Task? Easy. Standard? Easy. Condition? Whoops!! that's the rub, the widely varying conditions. Good leaders and trainers know this and work around the book. Unfortunately, everyone isn't a good leader or trainer.
    The issue with transference is also related to incorrect scope of skills versus knowledge. In situations where curriculum manifests as skills attainment to much balanced on the skill, the ability to transfer that skill is not transferable cognitively to other tasks. Industrial age education programs (almost everything) are created unfairly balanced towards skills. In the examples I could read (I don't have AKO) though the learning objectives are there they are examples of discrete skills versus knowledge.
    Absolutely. That's problem 2; we get kids who do very well on the tasks on which they were trained but they cannot combine them well and don't hit with something they haven't had.

    Hmm. That's not fair -- the kids cope and work their way through it, mostly. That's not good enough IMO. The system is letting them -- and units -- down.
    ...They do speed up skills attainment and deepen knowledge so it can be used creatively.
    True. Good news is that they're working on it. (LINK), (LINK)..

    I many never get my seven months but at least they're realizing all the flaws in the industrial model. That's progress.

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    Council Member William F. Owen's Avatar
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    Have to admire Ken for cutting the Gordian Knot on this one, (or making another? )
    I'm still umming and errring over what and why to teach it, rather than how. The thing that seems to be true, is that once you have good individual skills, the rest come easy.

    Testing skill and knowledge is not that hard. Working out why he/she needs to be able to do it, - and the accrued benefit is another.
    Infinity Journal "I don't care if this works in practice. I want to see it work in theory!"

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    Council Member Ken White's Avatar
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    Default Knots Enhanced. 50 Cents each.

    I took the easy part -- training on what is pretty much trained now, just do it a bit longer and hopefully with better trainers.

    You've elected to go after the hard part; what should be trained -- and prove it!

    I have no doubt in my mind that I've wasted a lot of time in training that I never used. I also know I did a very few things in combat that are not trained at all and a few more that were trained haphazardly in units by good and bad NCOs and Officers not all of whom knew what they were doing. I learned a lot on my own, some well and some nor so well. I also was a voracious reader -- many are not.

    One problem lies in duty assignments. I was a Tanker, so-so, not bad at it. Then I went to a Reconnaissance Company; totally different skillsets, major acceleration required, much flapping of wings. A few years later, I left SF for an Airborne Infantry unit, deceleration, coast and still do good.

    The Commonwealth Armies are in my observation better at training the basics and also pretty rigorous about forcing you to school before you do something new. In both cases, we were not that way though we have improved a bit. Regardless, sorting out what needs to be trained and how much would be highly beneficial.

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    - suspend some of the 'rights' of boots during basic, obey first, then think, its only what ... 9 weeks or so? I heard some kind of rumor a few years back about boots who could notify a DI if they were getting too stressed, surely to God that was a myth - avoid the high techery mindset in basic

  19. #19
    Council Member Ken White's Avatar
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    Default See that and raise you a penny...

    I've never agreed with that idea -- even though (or perhaps because) the USMC and Parris Island in 1949 had a lot that going on...

    I agree with the stress early on but that can best be provided by challenging them to do much more than they believe they can and by forcing them to THINK -- it'll be a novel experience for some. Maybe most...

    I've been through Boot Camp and three other courses where idle harassment and just doing what one was told were the norm. The intent was to provide stress, similar to combat -- it does not, it's just harassment to scare people into not asking questions because they take time to answer, makes life easier for the Instructor or Cadre. I've been through others that allowed, even encouraged, thinking and the Cadre mentored rather than 'smoked' people. No doubt in my mind in which type all us students learned more...

    What if instead of making people afraid to ask questions, we encouraged them to ask -- and told them in peacetime and in training WHY we wanted them to do something. Then they'd learn (a) there was a good reason to do it; (b) to think it through themselves; and (c) to do what was told without explanrtions when there was no time for explanations...

    That works and I never had a problem with it, peacetime or combat. For many years, I told a lot of young (and a few old) NCOs "I've never seen a pushup get a weapon clean or teach a kid what to do in a firefight."

    Still haven't.

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    Council Member slapout9's Avatar
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    I put this under Effective Training because it is.........effective.


    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jn7t1a_oCkE&NR=1

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