Any suggestions as to what can be done to help Soldiers get time to do college courses in person?
Remember, ACTIONS SPEAK LOUDER THAN WORDS!!!!!
What classes are you working on now?
http://www.ugcsurvival.com/SurvivalManuals%5CFM%20999-3.pdf
Yes I do. I counsel all of my Soldiers and NCOs monthly on
the importance of civilian education. I "highly encouraged" all of subordinates
to attend college. All of my Soldiers and NCOs are enroll in some type of
associates or bachelors program to include myself. I completed two associates
last year and I’m three classes away from my bachelors. NCOs should lead by
example.
I have gotten through everything the army is willing to pay for. As a 1LT (As of today), I hold an MBA in finance. It was very challenging so I am taking a prolonged tactical pause before moving to a second Masters or PhD.
I do not agree. That concept has been pushed for decades and has only resulted in an educational arms race, higher tuition, and graduates who cannot employ what they learned in an actual trade. The degree, in many cases, has been reduced to a badge of tenacity.
My question is, in what way does a degree for an enlisted servicemember enhance unit readiness? If college is critical to the mission, why is time not already budgeted during the duty day?
SFC Pate,
I agree with you up until the point you ask your question. I also agree that experience doing a job and learning that trade will better qualify you for a job than a piece of paper stating you have learned about it in a classroom, but we live in a society that has glorified that piece of paper and in order to succeed outside the military in most professional careers a degree is necessary.
I feel the military should take a serious interest in both Enlisted and Officer ranks education in order to have not only an experienced military, but an educated military.
We should take an interest in education in order to have an educated military? This is tautology.
I agree that education is advantageous, but is it worthwhile if obtained at the expense of METL specific training?
With our officer corps, we set up our own academies and fund schooling through ROTC in order to ensure sufficiently educated personnel fill our ranks.
If we really needed that level of education from the enlisted side, I doubt it would be difficult to expand those programs.
I assess that the primary beneficiaries of any pass or financial assistance are the soldier and the school. As such, it is an excellent morale and retention booster, but not a significant readiness enhancer.

College
Education
