Joint military training, education & assignments
Not only experiences like that, but also to see how the different branches take care of their people. It was interesting to see the contrasts- from PT for the Army to how the Navy decides who gets what language. I had my opinions on how the Air Force could take some advice from the other branches on our practices, not that it will amount to much coming from an E-4.
I would say that as an overall, I would give it a B also. What could improve it to an A? If you are going to compare things between branches, don't just compare. Find who has the best system or solution for an issue and use it. Don't just say "Well hey that makes sense." and keep on with what you are currently doing.
My biggest example would be the difference between how the Air Force issues languages and the Navy (this is based on what one Seaman told me how they get their language orders). The Air Force (from my experience) has you take the DLAB at MEPS. You pass, go to BMT, and at the end of BMT you go through two binders. One that has all the languages offered and one that has all the bases CONUS and OCONUS. You choose I think 10 languages you would be interested in and 8 CONUS and 8 OCONUS bases you would be interested in. If the language you want and the places you want to go line up with what the AF needs you get it. If not, you get put where they need you. The Navy on the other hand does it this way-again this is according to the Seaman I spoke with so if it is different now, please forgive the discrepancy- they take the DLAB, then they are given the list of languages that they qualify for according to their grade and they choose from those. I suppose it is similar that if they don't need the language they choose then they will get something else within the category they qualify for.
It would be beneficial for the AF to follow the Navy in their practice because the Navy places you according to your ability and desire, instead of solely based on the precept of pass/fail. If you choose according to both of those requirements, it is more likely you will grasp the language you are given reducing the failout rate. I scored a 105 on the DLAB was almost given Russian, but instead was reissued Arabic-Levantine. The Seaman who sat next to me in class scored a 180 on the DLAB. After I failed out, the Army Sgt in charge of our school house asked why I was in that class. Arabic (regardless of dialect) is a Category 6. I should have been in a lesser category like Spanish according to him. I couldn't agree more.
Apologies for the long response sir. Thank you for your time.
I truly enjoyed it. I admit it felt more like a college experience than it was a military one. One reason was because of the blend of services (although we all had our own company), but the other was because there were so many there getting a secondary MOS. Only about half of my class, from what I can remember, was directly out of basic training/boot camp.
Like SSgt Post, I think it deserved a B. (Also like her, my info is old, so if it's wrong, mea culpa). There were definitely things that one service did better than others. Again, the Navy led the way (I was Army). In the Navy, you automatically schooled and awarded BOTH MOS -- print and broadcast journalism (note: the first several weeks of both classes are the same, general Public Affairs training). I was told this was because Navy folks often had to be in an environment, such as a ship, where they did it all.
From my personal experience, I think all services should adopt that. I went as a print journalist, but when there, voice qualified as a broadcaster. So I was told I would stay for the other class. Right before graduation, I was told there was an URGENT need for print journalists in Germany, so I was pulled from broadcast class.
So I get to Germany, my first assignment, they were reorganizing, my slot lasted, literally, 3 months. I was then transferred to VII Corps HQ where I was double slotted. Then AFN (American Forces Radio) called desperate for a broadcaster. I was lucky enough to go, but had to OJT on what I was supposed to have been trained on in the first place. BTW: My boss was an AF Tech Sgt.
Then I ended up at Fort Riley, as a broadcaster, because they didn't have one when I got there, and they saw I had been at AFN. Then finally, a REAL broadcaster arrived and I was sent to be a print journalist, something I had never really done in my entire time in the service. I ended up in the National Guard later -- doing both jobs and TRYING to get an OJT officially approved for broadcasting. No go.
So, sorry again for a long ramble, but I later found out this happened to others, which supports my theory that all of us should have been trained in both MOS.
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