Posted on Feb 21, 2020
Can challenge coins be added to your erb under awards?
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I received one last week from the garrison command and one from the DES people( not sure if it was from their SGM or it is was from the civilians)
Posted 5 y ago
Responses: 15
No. Certificate of Achievement is the lowest award that can be added to your records.
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LTC Jason Mackay
CSM (Join to see) - yes if you have a letter signed by an O6/O5 they treat it like a Certificate of Achievement. They did that for a while, but I didn't know if they still did. Challenge coin, nope. No record.
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CSM (Join to see)
I agree with you Sir..it was a civilian who pretty much had the equivalent rank of an O5-O6!! That when I was stationed at Bad Abling Station in Germany! It was pretty much ran by civilians!
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SSG Robert Webster
SPC (Join to see) - Have you talked with your NCOIC? It sounds to me that you are circumventing that critical source. And by the way - what rank/pay grade are you?
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LTC (Join to see)
It’s a big deal to be recognized for good performance. Take that encouragement and continue to work hard to achieve the mission. Soon, you will be recognized with something that you can put on your ERB. SPC (Join to see)
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SPC (Join to see)
MSG Francisco Ojeda true MSG. Whatever a CSM cares about at that moment is then a big deal
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This question makes me wonder how low ASVAB scores can be and still be accepted....
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MAJ Bryan Zeski
SGT Joseph Gunderson
I never said you were nice.
And I never said you were dumb either. I just think it's arrogant to claim to be the smartest person in the room when you don't know any of them. Those who believe they are the most intelligent are often those who fall on the opposite end of that spectrum. Dunning-Kruger in a nutshell.
I never said you were nice.
And I never said you were dumb either. I just think it's arrogant to claim to be the smartest person in the room when you don't know any of them. Those who believe they are the most intelligent are often those who fall on the opposite end of that spectrum. Dunning-Kruger in a nutshell.
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SGT Joseph Gunderson
MAJ Bryan Zeski I understand Dunnung-Kruger, but it doesn't necessarily apply here. You never asked how much I know about particular things, or I would have given a very specific answer of what I know about, say, physics, or literature, or history. I simply assume I'm the smartest person in the room generally, which does not mean that I don't understand my own intellectual inadeqacies, rather I simply assume, until proven otherwise, that they aren't as great as those of whom I'm interacting. This goes doubly for academics, who for years have specialized and it has given them a sense of infallibility. I am certainly not infallible, and I am open to the idea of being proven wrong. However, when it comes to my leadership style--at least as it relates to the military, which does not work well elsewhere--my approach has proven to motivate and develop soldiers. Will it work now with the soldiers enlisting today? Possibly not. But before I left the Army about six years ago, it was working just fine.
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MAJ Bryan Zeski
SGT Joseph Gunderson On the internet, everyone knows everything about everything. Thanks Google.
I've never talked to someone who claims to be the smartest who ever is.
You didn't really have a lot of time to motivate and develop Soldiers as an NCO, so they are certain to have had other influences in their development.
We obviously have different philosophies in dealing with people. You assume everyone is a moron so as not be disappointed. I assume everyone is relatively intelligent so I don't underestimate them. I'd rather err on the side of caution than be caught off guard because I assumed they were a moron.
I've never talked to someone who claims to be the smartest who ever is.
You didn't really have a lot of time to motivate and develop Soldiers as an NCO, so they are certain to have had other influences in their development.
We obviously have different philosophies in dealing with people. You assume everyone is a moron so as not be disappointed. I assume everyone is relatively intelligent so I don't underestimate them. I'd rather err on the side of caution than be caught off guard because I assumed they were a moron.
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SGT Joseph Gunderson
MAJ Bryan Zeski - The internet is the best and worst of humanity. I wish it wasn't so, but it is. And even on its best days, Google does not magically confer understanding; it only hands people information to regurgitate. That is certainly not "knowing."
I have been let done one too many times by people who receive the benefit of the doubt. Maybe, one of these days, I'll be willing to give people that chance again. But, at present, I would much rather be pleasantly surprised that all people aren't brain dead than have to deal with the failures of people I trusted to do a particular task.
I have been let done one too many times by people who receive the benefit of the doubt. Maybe, one of these days, I'll be willing to give people that chance again. But, at present, I would much rather be pleasantly surprised that all people aren't brain dead than have to deal with the failures of people I trusted to do a particular task.
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