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TSgt. Kenneth Allbrooks, with the 363rd Expeditionary
Services Squadron Education Office, assists TSgt.
Scott West in signing up for a test. USAF has
embarked on a program that leaders hope will
better link education and training to an individuals
career.
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A few years ago, Air Force leaders began questioning
whether the services current education and training
approachthe process used to groom individuals
for increased responsibilityamounted to little
more than helping members fill the right squares on
their service records. They discovered, unfortunately,
that while the approach might improve promotion chances,
it did not necessarily make individuals more productive
on the job or materially advance their overall careers.
To remedy the situation, the Air Force has embarked
on a sweeping overhaul of its personnel system. It
has dubbed the new approach Force Development.
In announcing the initiative, Gen. John P. Jumper,
Air Force Chief of Staff, said it not only will tie
training and education more closely to an individuals
career development but also tailor assignments and
other personnel actions toward the same end.
As we transformed our Cold War structure into
an Air and Space Expeditionary Force, it follows that
we should transition the way we train, educate, promote,
and assign our Total Force, said Jumper. Force
Development applies equally to active duty officer
and enlisted, reserve components, and civiliansacross
all specialtieswhether at home or in a
tent city, on the flight line or the launchpad, in
the air or in the lab, he added.
The new undertaking is being applied first to officers,
but the Air Force already is working on a parallel
program for civilian employees and beginning a similar
overhaul for enlisted members and the reserve forces.
The service expects to apply the approach to the whole
force within the next year.
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In a revamp of Air Command and Staff College,
officers, such as this pilot, will concentrate
on one of a group of occupational skills during
the last portion. That skill will help determine
the pilots next duty assignment.
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The Custom Fit
The Force Development goal is to move away from
a one-size-fits-all approach, said Brig. Gen.
Richard S. Hassan, director of USAFs Senior Leader
Management Office and point man on many of the changes.
He said the Air Force recognizes that each individuals
career consists of a number of experiences and those
experiences are not necessarily the same for all members.
The goal is to match those experiences closer to the
needs of the individual and the service.
We want to do what makes sense for both the
service and the individual, said Hassan.
He continued, If you understand the needs of
the Air Force and you understand what people like to
do in career development, why cant we marry that
up better by matching education and training opportunities
more to the individual career as opposed to saying,
again, one size fits all?
For example, Hassan said that to become competent
as a pilot, there is a standard set of functional experiences
the pilot must go through. We understand that
pretty well, he said. I call that occupational
competence. The other piece of the equation is
what education and training opportunities we offer.
Our terminology is that they are the enduring
competencies. So the key is how to tie all of
that together in a way that makes sense.
One way the service plans to do that is to redirect
its approach to Professional Military Education. We
want to stop thinking about one opportunity for everybody,
which is what we do today in PME, said Hassan.
The Intermediate Service Schools level, such as Air
Command and Staff College, provides a good illustration
of the problem, said Hassan. Under the old system,
USAF simply selected a certain number of people to
go to ACSC or some other service equivalent. That
doesnt really meet the future needs of the Air
Force nor does it meet what the individuals may need, he
said.
Hassan said the service asked the most recent ISS
selection board to act not just as a PME selection
board but as an educational development board. That
can mean we have a certain number of people we want
to send to PME, a certain number we want to get advanced
academic degrees, a certain number we want to send
to some fellowship programs, and a certain number of
people, say in the acquisition world, that we want
to send to some education-with-industry program, he
explained.
Connecting individuals more closely with their career
development should make the Air Force stronger, said
Hassan. The engineer who goes to Stanford to
get his engineering masters or Ph.D. likes that, he
added. It makes that individual a lot more competent
and credible within his career field.
This does not mean all members will follow separate
routes throughout their training, Hassan said. Rather,
they will take some blocks of training together and
then branch into different channels.
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A college field representative assists A1C
Robyn Dorocak, 86th Airlift Wing, Ramstein AB,
Germany. Surveys show that education and training
are major incentives in the services ability
to retain personnel.
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First Up
The service plans to change ACSC into three modules. Module
1 will be called Leadership and Joint Development and
focus on things we hold dear such as doctrine, strategy,
and leadership principles, said Hassan. The module
probably would be from 10 to 16 weeks long. Everybody
would take that part so theyre all grounded in
the same thing, he added.
Module 2 would focus on the operational art of war.
ACSC is the intermediate level of PME and its
there that individuals should shift their focus from
the tactical to the operational and staff issues. It
helps the individual, said Hassan, transition beyond
the wing level. The module would be about three months
long. With Module 1, a student would have completed
approximately the first six months of the normal ACSC
10-month cycle.
Module 3 is the really unique part of the new
approach, said Hassan. The training will
be related to what I call a satellite group of occupational
skills. For example, he said a fighter pilot
generally will concentrate on one of five occupational
areas: acquisition, plans and programs, politicomilitary,
space, and a sort of superoperations area. Whichever
skill the pilot chooses will be the deciding factor
in the pilots next duty assignment. In the past,
the Air Force simply would project a postACSC
assignment based on whatever job might be open. Module
3, in effect, said Hassan, will help prepare an individual
for his or her next duty assignment.
He noted that the service may conduct additional training
for a particular occupational skill at Maxwell AFB,
Ala., the home of ACSC, or elsewhere. For instance,
Hassan said that if the Air Mobility Warfare Center
has the premier mobility operations course, we
might take the five or 10 or 15 people who are going
through mobility ops as their connected skill and send
them to [the center] for 10 weeks.
The Air Force has also made evolutionary improvements
in some of its training programs largely to accommodate
a smaller, more scattered force. Much of this effort
exploits modern technology, and it is not without its
problems.
Making the Connection
In a generic sense, I would say that access
to courses has improved for deployed members, said
Jim Sweizer, chief of Air Forces Voluntary Education
Branch, which monitors off-duty study programs. He
said that USAF has established some learning centers
overseas, especially in Saudi Arabia, where service
members can take required tests and where there are
computer labs to help them.
The biggest issue with trying to get this information
over to deployed folks in an electronic format is connectivity, Sweizer
said, adding, Thats a big problem when
youre in somebody elses country. He
noted, too, that the cost is high in many countries.
I think were meeting the needs of those
people who are going over and doing a better job of
counseling them before they depart, said Sweizer. There
is nothing to prevent them from signing up for a course
in a distance learning format, be that computer-based
training or Internet Webbased courses, before
they leave. Depending on the length of deployment,
we can get them into a quick course or something that
they can start and continue when they get back.
The Air Force increasingly is turning to the electronic
world for in-house training efforts. Our main
goal is to leverage technology so that we can meet
the warfighters needs anytime, anywhere, said
Maj. Buster McCall, chief of Advanced Distributed Learning. Right
now, all enlisted and officer PME levels offer courses
via Advanced Distributed Learning.
Currently, more than 53,000 student per year participate
in distributed learning courses, the majority of which
are in 100 percent ADL format, said McCall. Almost
11,000 officers are enrolled each year in intermediate
and senior service programs and complete a part of
their programs using CD-ROM products, he added.
Beyond serving as a career development tool, Air Force
officials are well aware that education and training
play a major role in recruiting and retention. Sweizer
said the service has documentation from 1996 through
2000 that shows that continuing their education is
the No. 1 reason persons joined the Air Force.
When airmen in Basic Military Training are asked why
they enlisted, he said, for the most part, continuing
education on active duty is the No. 1 reason. The
No. 2 and 3 spots fluctuate between training
in a skill and a secure job, he added.
Surveys also show that education and training are
major factors in the decision to remain in service,
particularly for enlisted members. Officers, who must
have at least one degree before they are commissioned,
less often list these as top reasons for staying, but
they still count them high among the favorable influences.
Congress has provided several education incentives
to enhance military recruiting and retention efforts.
For example, the Tuition Assistance Program, which
allows service members to work toward college degrees
while still on active duty, recently received a boost.
Last October, the government began paying full tuition
and mandatory fees up to $250 per semester hour or
a maximum of $4,500 per year. The previous rate had
been only 75 percent of tuition, with a $3,500 ceiling.
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TSgt. Rick Seward, 317th Recruiting Squadron,
checks out the data collection functions on a
Raptor mobile recruiting office. Educational
benefits are the chief reason individuals join
USAF.
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Expand the GI Bill?
In the past two years, Congress also increased the
benefits paid under the Montgomery GI Bill by some
46 percent. Last year alone, the benefits rose to $900
per month and will rise to $985 in October 2003 for
veterans who served at least three years and are enrolled
in full-time study. Service members contribute a portion
of their pay to an education fund to be able to participate
in the GI Bill.
There is also a push in Congress to increase benefits
further, essentially taking the GI Bill back to its
World War II status. According to Darryl Kehrer, staff
director for the benefits subcommittee of the House
Veterans Affairs Committee, in todays environment
a veteran attending a public, four-year institution
as a commuter student would need a monthly allowance
of $1,409.
We talk about the all-volunteer force, but we
all know what it isits an all-recruited
force, he told a conference last summer. Returning
to the postWorld War IIera GI Bill would
send a message to the youth of America and to middle-class
parents who are priced out of student aid programs.
Conversely, while services tout the GI Bill in recruiting
ads, military officials worry that making the program
too generous could work against retention efforts.
They are concerned that the new push to boost the GI
Bill could serve as a reverse incentive to making the
service a career.
Measured increases such as going from $800 to
$900 or $985 are a good thing, said Sweizer, but
I would be remiss if I said that we werent concerned
about some of these proposed increases, where they
want to go to anywhere from $1,300 per month to actually
paying for full education and maybe giving a nice stipend
along with it.
He said that kind of carrot ... could serve
as an incentive to leave.
Ideally, officials would like more members to use
training and education opportunities available to them
while in the service as a foundation they would build
upon after they serve a full career. One of the best
methods for doing that for enlisted members, said Sweizer,
is the Community College of the Air Force.
On average, an airman will spend about 12 years to
earn a CCAF degree. Spending that length of time in
the service virtually guarantees the airman will make
the Air Force a career, staying for at least 20 years.
CCAF gives airmen credit for technical training they
receive in the Air Force and allows them to add to
those credits with off-duty study that can lead to
an associate degree. Later, many graduates use their
credits to enter four-year colleges to earn bachelors
degrees. However, some people charge that CCAF credits
are not accepted at face value by many civilian institutions.
Sweizer argues that CCAF is fully accredited
by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools.
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As the Air Force implements its new Force Development
program, it also must balance competing personnel
issues, such as a proposal to boost the GI Billit
might aid recruiting efforts but could negatively
impact retention.
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He emphasized, though, that some students may have
trouble transferring highly technical credits. Thats
something that any student will run into, said
Sweizer. For example, he said that CCAF offers an associate
of applied sciencea technology-based degree that
derives largely from technical training gained in the
Air Force. It will be unlikely that an airman could
transfer those technical training credits directly
into a liberal arts or history degree program. After
all, he asked, how many places have a bachelors
degree in avionics systems technology?
On the other hand, there are many civilian institutions
that have partnered with the Air Force for years, said
Sweizer. Some accept all credits from CCAF degrees.
He noted that USAF education counselors advise airmen of
the pitfalls in transferring technical types of credit
and that they may have to do a little more work to
get a nontechnical type degree.
Overall, officials say, USAF education and training
programs are healthy and growing. However, they maintain
that new approaches may be needed to expand opportunities
for a force that is smaller and yet called on to do
more.
As the Air Force becomes a smaller, more deployed
force, we have to do a better job of using technology
to help our people no matter where they are, said
Sweizer. One of those new measures, he said, is a Webbased
progress report developed by CCAF to show airmen specifically
what courses they still need to complete their degree
requirements. They dont have to go through an
education office to keep up-to-date. Another effort
involved developing a virtual education center to let
individuals enroll from their work places or from home,
request tuition assistance, and do other types of educational
processing.
On the new Force Development initiative, Hassan cautioned
that the servicewill need to work its way into change,
especially with the rated force, where there has been
such pressure to fill cockpits.
He emphasized, though, that the initiative works within
the Expeditionary Aerospace Force concept. The
module idea may offer even more flexibility in determining
when people go on and off deployment, he added. Actually,
we may be able to accommodate some people that we might
not have in the past.
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Everyone Should Be an Instructor
As part of its new approach to education and
training, Air Force leaders want to make becoming
an instructor a more acceptable choice for service
members.
Each of us who makes the Air Force a career
is obliged to invest some part of that career
in training or educating the airmen who will
take our place, said Gen. John P. Jumper,
Air Force Chief of Staff, when he announced the
services new Force Development initiative.
Service leaders believe the Air Force no longer
has a representative set of skills within its
instructor force. We need to commit resources
so that people want to instruct and we send our
best and brightest to train our youngest, the
people who are going to replace us, said
Brig. Gen. Richard S. Hassan, director of USAFs
Senior Leader Management Office.
In the other services, its considered
important for people to have been instructors
at academies or recruiters or things that we
in the Air Force, for whatever reason, have not
held dear, he explained.
The Air Force must develop a system to support
its instructors, he said. More importantly, we,
as individuals, have to rethink how we view them,
because, today, most people dont view such
assignments as something they need to do, emphasized
Hassan. We have to make everybody think
about [instructing] being a duty, to leave the
legacy to the youth.
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Copyright Air Force Association. All rightsreserved.
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