Posted on Apr 20, 2016
Should a supervisor get negatively counseled if their Soldier does not make progress from an ABCP or APFT failure?
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To add onto my original question. Would the circumstances change if the Soldier was an NCO, possibly a mid-career NCO who knows by now their individual responsibilities and the Army standards. Should that NCO's supervisor get negatively counseled? How far up the ranks would it end? Would a Master Sergeant (E8) get a negative counseling for their subordinate? Would an Officer?
Edited >1 y ago
Posted >1 y ago
Responses: 44
I would say no. We are in the military, not a baby sitting service. The soldier knows the standards and it's their personal responsibility to adhere to it. Just like on APFT and Weapons. If the Soldier needs help or motivation - and the leader didn't provide that, then that's different. But, at the end of the day the soldier has to want better and do better for themselves.
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NO. If the Superior is there, doing "Remedial" & giving up their personal time to enforce/help the "Soldier" try & progress to correct the deficiency, a resounding no. As I know from first hand, if the soldier, when away from the superior eats like a horse, is lazy, drinks like a fish, & doesn't give a rat's ass, they will FAIL no matter what. There is a mentality, not just the physical, in getting a soldier to pass. If they aren't in it mentally, no matter what is done to help, they are still doomed to fail due to the mindset. The supervisor cannot & should not be required to "BABYSIT" 24/7. They need to sleep/eat & have some time for other duties/R&R also. Some soldiers are just a "LOST CAUSE". No matter what you do, your SOL!
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Only if it's systemic. If a team leader has 4 guys pass and 1 doesn't, who's fault? But if none in the tear pass, maybe it's a leadership problem. And that can go right up the line. It's one thing to have individual soldiers fail because an APFT still is an individual requirement. But if there is a high percentage of failures, you have to look at leaders and the training being conducted.
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There are only a handful of individual tasks required for soldiers.
- Height/Weight/Bodyfat
- APFT
- Weapons Qual
Yes, that leader is responsible for TRAINING their soldiers to meet/exceed the standard. However once they have been trained, they cannot control what that soldier eats/drinks/whatever.
The answer is no.
- Height/Weight/Bodyfat
- APFT
- Weapons Qual
Yes, that leader is responsible for TRAINING their soldiers to meet/exceed the standard. However once they have been trained, they cannot control what that soldier eats/drinks/whatever.
The answer is no.
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No the supervisor should not get counseled. When the smoke clear at the end of the day, it's up to the individual regardless of rank to pass APFT. The army standard is 180. I remember in my infantry days back in 98 when I was with 1-68AR BN 3rd BCT 4th ID in Carson, my PSG set a standard where every individual in the platoon had to get a 270 or above on every APFT. I scored a 250 thinking he was joking, but 24 to 48 hours later, I had to retake another APFT to meet the 270 requirement.
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Hell naaw. That's on the NCO...the subordinate NCO, that is. He/she knows the standard, and should be striving to meet it. The senior NCO is just the facilitator. If you're a career NCO and can't motivate yourself to pass APFT, major injury aside, you've got issues.
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Supervisor should not get counseled as long that supervisor reacted accordingly to try to fix the problem.
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It depends on what you, the leader, do for the Soldier, if do nothing and you two or more APFT failure then, YES. You should get a counseling. If they were PT Studs you'd want the to reflect on your NCOER, right?
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Should only get negatively counseled if they didn't do everything in their power to assist the soldier or NCO to pass.
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Building on MSG Rader's comment. I can see both arguments. If I have a Soldier that has failedin his duties to maintain what I call fighting weight/status (which is a personal responsibility), then it does fall on us to lay out a plan that he signs and agrees to in his counseling. This being said, there is not much difference between that and morning PT which is NOT designed to make us PT studs, only to maintain. Anything above maintain is TOTALLY on us. Height and Weight is TOTALLY on US. going on to your follow on, if they are an NCO, they know this even more. I am personally of the mindset that get a shorter period of time to get into standard or they lose that position of responsibility because they are not fit to lead by example.
ON the the question of the day though. If we have done all of what is expected of us by setting the paperwork in motion, then there is no progress I do not feel that it is on the leadership. The reason is this, we can show the way, we cannot hold the hand. As long as there is a clear and defined path, and there is a follow up on it, then we have done what we can and the Soldier and shown where they are on the situation.
Just my take on the matter,
ON the the question of the day though. If we have done all of what is expected of us by setting the paperwork in motion, then there is no progress I do not feel that it is on the leadership. The reason is this, we can show the way, we cannot hold the hand. As long as there is a clear and defined path, and there is a follow up on it, then we have done what we can and the Soldier and shown where they are on the situation.
Just my take on the matter,
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again responders look at the original question you as senior leaders, should you be counselled negativelty
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people in rp responding, read the thread, how far up should the counselling go
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For me it remains the same. While you are correct regarding the difference of professionalism and understanding of more senior grades it is still the responsibility of the supervisor of the NCO, Officer at any grade to properly counsel and coach. If the leadership is doing so and there is record of this then it falls squarely on the individual.
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No. There's a point where the soldier just won't put forth the effort. You can 'order' a soldier to do better on their PT test, but some people don't have it at some point. Is the military going to separate or send someone to military prison for not passing the PT test? Punishing a superior officer/enlisted makes no sense. This isn't WW2 Germany.
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You can only motivate a soldier to a certain point but if they don't want to do it for themselves then they aren't going to no matter how much work and time you put in as an NCO. So i dont think counseling the leadership is necessary
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From what I've learned in my year hell to the yes. But, that is why I provide a plan and the soldier provides a plan because at the end of the day in his or her free time I can not make the Soldier do PT on their own. So when they fail I simply show the plan I provided and the plan they provide slap a counseling for failure to commit or go back to the counseling I gave them initially and state he/she failed to comply with Thier plan. The ball is in their court now they fail themselves rather I fail them.
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It could go either way, If you have a team leader not counseling his troop or developing a plan, checking on the plan, insuring progress, then his whole chain can be counseled. Squad leader for not checking team leaders, PSG for not checking SL's... etc. Personal Responsibility. If the soldier fails to make ht/wt or fails pt tests. Reduction in rank, followed by processing to be released. An initial counseling should cover all expectations.
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