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Army Tones Down Drill Sergeants
Associated Press
October 11, 2006
WASHINGTON
- Hollywood may have to tone down its portrayal of the military's
screaming, in-your-face boot camp drill sergeant. In today's Army,
shouting is out and a calmer approach to molding young minds is in,
says the head of Pentagon personnel. The Army says it has reduced by
nearly 7 percent the number of recruits who wash out in the first six
to 12 months of military life.
"Part of it is changing the nature of how it treats people in basic
training," David S. Chu, undersecretary for personnel and readiness,
said Tuesday.
That means "less shouting at everyone, in essence, which some of you
may remember from an earlier generation as being the modus operandi,"
he said.
The changes started about a year ago, as defense officials looked for
ways to make drillmasters more effective, said Lt. Col. Mike Jones,
head of Army National Guard recruiting.
He said the old way was to "talk loud, talk often, get their attention"
- shock treatment to teach discipline and mold the newly recruited
civilian into a Soldier.
But trainers found today's generation responded better to instructors
who took "a more counseling" type role, Jones said, using strong
tactics when needed but keeping them the exception instead of the rule.
The approach has had two positive results, he said: It has lowered
attrition among those who go through training each year and has eased
one of the greatest fears of recruits - their fear over whether they
can make it through basic training.
Other changes aimed at improving graduation rates include such things
as letting recruits with injuries or minor medical problems remain in
the service, heal, and then go back to training. Before, an injury
would have meant discharge, training officials said.
Numbers differ from service to service and depend on what the recruit
is being trained for. Those training to be Navy SEALS or other special
forces may wash out at the rate of 70 percent. Those training to be
truck drivers may have an 80 percent graduation rate.
But Chu said that across all services, generally, some two-thirds of
recruits finish their enlistment period - typically three or four years.
Of the third who don't make it, half bomb out in the first six to 12
months, Chu said, adding that the attrition rate is better than most
private sector firms.
Keeping a balance in the number flushed out of the service is
important. Too many dropouts and you lose people you really want to
keep. Too few dropouts, and you are keeping people you should have let
go, Chu said.
Both the military and police academies are moving away from harder-edged approaches to training, he said.
"However much it may be satisfying from the shouter's perspective, it
really isn't the best way to shape young people for the future," Chu
said.
He made the comments as he announced that all active duty services had
met their recruiting goals for the budget year ended Sept. 30. The
Marine Corps Reserve met its goal and the Air Force Reserve exceeded
its goal, but they were exceptions among guard and reserve forces, some
of which have seen "heavy use" due to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan,
Chu said.
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