Posted on Sep 29, 2015
COL Jim Kohlmann
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TRADOC is tinkering with Basic again. Looks like they are heading in the right direction, but they are missing the boat by STILL not requiring trainees to pass the APFT. That was one of my biggest gripes as a Battalion Commander in Korea - if they can't make it in a training environment, don't pass the problem on to us in the field! What do you think? http://www.armytimes.com/story/military/careers/army/enlisted/2015/09/27/these-new-tests-army-recruits-must-pass-basic-training/72754566/?from=global&sessionKey=&autologin=
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Responses: 17
LTC Joseph Gross
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I would disagree. TRADOC learned long ago that the lower standard greatly reduced PT related injuries and still allowed Soldiers to complete AIT in good shape where they ARE required to pass the APFT at the Army standard. If you had Soldiers showing up unable to pass the APFT that was not an IET problem. That they showed up without shin splints is the result of the current training standards.

By the way, during my two years as a BCT Commander at Fort Jackson, we averaged 234 despite only being required to meet the BCT lower standard. It was rare that we had a Soldier graduate only meeting the BCT standard. If there is a problem it is not at BCT.
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MSG Brad Sand
MSG Brad Sand
10 y
Sorry Sir,

From reading COL Jim Kohlmann's statement 'they are missing the boat by STILL not requiring trainees to pass the APFT. That was one of my biggest gripes as a Battalion Commander in Korea' I jump to the wrong conclusion. I apologize for not my misreading...but not for my stance.
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MAJ Small Group Leader
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10 y
What is the recruitment standard?....My recruiter gave me a diagnostic APFT and made me earn the costs associated with even being sent to basic and that was in 2004. Certainly our standards are higher now.
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1px xxx
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10 y
The APFT standard has been the same for a long time, and the process produces results that are outstanding given the timeline and some of the volunteers we are starting with. All Soldiers leave AIT with a passing score of at least 60 points in each event. The place where we fail most is to instill the pride and personal discipline that is needs to maintain that fitness level while on leave, or between the last APFT in AIT and the first one at their initial duty station. I see NCOs and officers who do the same thing. They slack and get lazy after they pass that APFT and they start "getting ready" about 4-5 months later. That is an Army wide thing that we all need to address, it is not a TRADOC standards problem. Also to touch on the lax NCO or Officer in the training environment, that is probably the bigger issue. They fail to actually hold the new Soldiers to the standard, and then tell other leaders to lighten up when they are actually doing the job of training to standard. We as leaders need to take responsibility for each other and Do a little policing among our peers. The standards will get the job done.
CPT Daniel Cox
CPT Daniel Cox
6 y
Running in boots brought on my shin splints in BCT in 1974. I thought switching to running shoes was supposed to preclude that?
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SPC Christopher Perrien
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Edited 10 y ago
How things change. When I joined 1985, you were not going to leave Basic/AIT without passing the PT test . 40pu/40su/2m-15:00mins. Now this was Armor US Army. And at a regular duty station if you could not pass 2 tests with a 6 month interval you were gone.

Normal days , our officers, who didn't go break track, or have bust ass details, or drink all night, would have us running 1 1/2+ to 5 miles a day , 4 times a week. I hated running and I think it has lead to back problems now. We on occasion(monthly, or Bi-mn) did 7-8 mile runs. Try that with a "hating-life" hangover and/or being a 40+ year old NCO. LOL

More important , our infantry minded officers with their 5+ mile runs , and they then play tennis in the afternoon, rather than slinging a sledge:), just did not understand ,

Tankers ain't Infantry, if a tanker has to run, it means we have lost the war. :)
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1SG Cameron M. Wesson
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Team,

I been around a day or two like many of you so lets agree that requirements change and experiences vary. Now to the topic at hand:

Issue #1. TR 350-6 (ENLISTED INITIAL ENTRY TRAINING POLICIES AND ADMINISTRATION) DTD 25 SEP 2015 (this week) provides OSUT/AIT was only meant to get you a soldier that was at the 60% mark. You have a very short period of time to mold and move them out. The units take them and get them to the next levels. What ever those levels are. Realisitically, that is a bear to do. Ask any DS out here. The specifc chapter and verses that talks PRT/APFT is 5-8, 5-9 and 5-10.

OSUT does an incredible job getting over 95% (probably greater) of their soldiers to higher standard than "60%" I know... I got many Infantrymen from the "Benning School for Wayward Boys" from 85-95 and it was the rare PVT that wasn't able to do what was asked. No, many were not use to the "god awful" weight of a ruck and gear... but they... most of them in my experience... adapted and gained the strength. I think we confuse the "few" with the majority of the good we get from the training base.

Issue #2. TR 350-6 (ENLISTED INITIAL ENTRY TRAINING POLICIES AND ADMINISTRATION) DTD 25 SEP 2015 (this week) provides for enlisted IET. These have not change very much in recent time.
OSUT soliders must pass the PRT/APFT prior to graduation... hell I did in 1983 and to a greater extent everyone in my OSUT had well over 210... I actually had a 300 and got my first LTC CoA for doing so (hey... that was 5 promotion points then). BCT was/is different... the requirement has been 50% because they must pass the APFT prior to graduation from AIT. Remember... OSUT is BCT and AIT rolled up into one! Again, the specifc chapter and verses that talks PRT/APFT is 5-8, 5-9 and 5-10.

I also know about the above concerning AIT because when I was medically reclass from the INF as a senior SSG in 96... and I attended AIT at Fort Eustis. While there the Drill Sergeants asked for my help with the adminsitration of the monthly diagnostic APFT" and "APFT failures". This is where I learned that a diagnostic PRT/APFT was required monthly untill graduation... at which time... two week prior to graduation the student soldiers would be adminstiered a "for Record" APFT. Here I want you to remember that these soldiers "remedial" soldiers were also rare exception... not the rule. In the AIT company I was attached less than 20 out of a 300+ AIT company. That's not a bad OR rating in my book.

Issue #3 Injurys... I won't belabor the point that LTC Joseph Gross provided in this thread. I will only amplify this by saying that those of use that graduated the Master Fitness Course learned well that the injurys that were sustained by 1st termers were mostly due to PT... and accounted for most medical retention boards. Any CO/1SG and CSM on here can probably attest to this! and not for only a 1st termer... but for careerist also. As a MFT it was our responsibility to ensure that a APFT program was established for "total fitness"... which simply does not happen over night... and try to minimize the risk for injury.

Lastly, the BIG ARMY agreed to enlist a soldier for X years. For the case of many... 3-4 years. The idea is to get a soldier to a "BASIC" level knowledge, training, education, and yes fitness... and then get them out to the Army to perform a mission. If you want to keep a soldier in the TTHS account to obtain a great given level of any of those areas... then the big Army most understand that units... all units... will have those resources for a shorter period of time. If this is acceptable... then so be it.

My opinion? Give me a kid that is in the last stages of the forming process... I'm an NCO... or I was... I'd get them ready for that next "'100M". Thank goodness I had leadership that felt the same way!

My two cents
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1SG Michael Blount
1SG Michael Blount
10 y
IMHO, there's not a lot of difference between a 60% pass on the APFT and your local bar slug.  I agree, there's not much time between the time boots show up and ship out.  Been there, done that, got the t-shirt and seen the video.
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1SG Cameron M. Wesson
1SG Cameron M. Wesson
10 y
1SG Michael Blount i agree... But if 60% is what it takes to get a kid to me... I'll take them... My job is to get them better.
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1SG Michael Blount
1SG Michael Blount
10 y
1SG Cameron M. Wesson - I can't help but wonder about motivations here. is the 60% acknowlegement that kids come into BCT worthless, weak and there's not much time to fix the weak part? OR is it so TRADOC can beef up their graduation rates and numbers? IMHO, Army needs to pull a page out of the USMC playbook - ie. - you want to join us, be prepared to break your ass doing so.
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TRADOC Changes Requirements to Graduate from Basic ...Again
LTC Battalion Commander
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Correct me if I am wrong, we are a ALL volunteer Military, correct? What happened to setting standards high, reward those who do well, create competition and if you don't make the cut then you go home.
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SSG John Erny
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COL Jim Kohlmann LTC Joseph Gross 1SG Cameron M. Wesson 1SG Michael Blount Gentlemen,
The variable is AIT, some are a couple of weeks and others longer, in my case Rigger School was 12 weeks. After twelve weeks most rigger students were in very good physical condition and the fact we were pushed to meet airborne standards. An AIT soldier with a very short time to prepare may not be able to make the 60% mark if they are already struggling with PT.

On the guard side I have seen several soldiers who made it through basic and AIT and admitted that they were pencil whipped through PT just so the active side did not have to deal with them. They were now the guards problem. They never amounted to much BTW.
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LTC Joseph Gross
LTC Joseph Gross
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I never ran into a RC problem and I guess I was lucky in that regard. Most units do the right thing and send their new Soldiers ready for IET rather than have a failed Soldier on their books.
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1SG Michael Blount
1SG Michael Blount
10 y
SSG John Erny - a couple observations: (1) Airborne is a thin sliver of the Army, albeit a very cool one, and a career field not usually open to USAR or ARNG (2) Many (I'd guess more than half) BCT/IET people belong to UISAR or ARNG. IMHO, TRADOC needs to quit searching for the path of least resistance. I always push my BCT Soldiers to come up to MY standards, because I sure as hell ain't coming down to theirs.
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SSG John Erny
SSG John Erny
10 y
1SG Michael Blount - Top, that was spoken like a true NCO, keeping the standards! You are correct that most NG / RC soldiers are not Airborne, Nebraska does have them. A soldier must score 250 or better on their PT test or the units will not even consider letting them in. We have Riggers, SF support, and once company of LRPS.
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1SG Michael Blount
1SG Michael Blount
10 y
SSG John Erny - Not sure how airborne slots are assigned. I know I couldn't even get into the school after winning Soldier of the year in 92 or NCO of the year in 93. Don't get me started on the politics involved. Suffice to say that was one reason for transferring to USAR to become a DS. After that, I never looked back
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SGM G3 Sergeant Major
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COL Jim Kihlmann, My wife and I were reading this last night. It's surprising to me that how to address an Officer and an NCO isn't just part of indoctrination and drilled into a Soldiers consciousness, but is part of the actual test, now. I do not remember that as part of the end of cycle test in 87, it may have been, but I do remember the Claymore Mine, LAW, M16 Functions check, PRC77 send and receive, Phonetic Alphabet, and First Aid being on the test. I believe the last task was the 18 mile ruck march.
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SFC William Swartz Jr
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The downfall of today's Army began in the early-90's when BCT/OSUT standards began to be "softened" from where it was when I graduated 19E OSUT just 4-5 years earlier. We NCOs, and the Army as a whole, were "told" that this was due to Enlistees being "smarter and more technically savvy" so discipline was not administered in the same manner in which it had been, the APFT requirements to pass BCT/IET were no longer the same standard which the Army as a whole was held to, as it had been a mere 4-5 years prior, and the quality of Soldier arriving to their 1st duty station in shape enough to pass the APFT was below where it had been and this took away from the unit's readiness and placed further requirements upon NCOs to get these sub-par Soldiers in shape and capable of passing the APFT. This took not only those Soldiers but NCOs away from training that at the time was difficult enough due to budgetary constraints at the time under the Bush-41 and Clinton administrations. I am glad to see some of these changes being implemented, but IMO, we should never have gotten to the point where the Army needed to go back to what worked for so long.
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MSG Brad Sand
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Edited 10 y ago
On one level, I can see allowing the soldier to complete Basic without passing the APFT but not AIT or OSUT. IF they are not able to complete this in a training environment, how or why would they in a unit? MAYBE the correct answer is not passing the failure farther and farther down the system but cutting our losses earlier? Instead of allowing people to pass through the system without meeting the standard, let's raise the entry standards...especially during a downsizing.
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MSG Brad Sand
MSG Brad Sand
10 y
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The problem with these, and all political, games within the military is that they always have a price that is bad in blood. Sometime we do not see it directly, but someone always pays.
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SFC Combat Engineer
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MSG Brad Sand
I promise you that I am working my tail off to train to standard. Sometimes my recommendations are followed. This We'll Defend!!
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MSG Brad Sand
MSG Brad Sand
10 y
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I trust you that you do. It is men, and women, like you that give me continued hope for our Nation, military and Army. We need more people...leaders...holding the Green Line. I think you have reached a point where you can step back and observe that our soldiers, all of them, take pride in being held to a higher standard but for some reason, we think they want our leaders to be easy on them? Have you ever heard anyone say with pride, "So proud of my training being easy."
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SFC Combat Engineer
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10 y
MSG Brad Sand - Hell no.
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SSG Cadet
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They should pass the APFT and also weight and tape!!! I'm so tired of seeing people walking around in uniform who are clearly out of regulation.

Want to downsize the Army, put out an ALARACT message; 60 days, record APFT, height and weight, you fail, you go home.
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CPT Platoon Leader
CPT (Join to see)
10 y
I agree. The fact that the Army even produces a XXXL APFU with elastic waistband sickens me. Nobody wearing that is even remotely near anything that could be considered close to the standard
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SSG Warren Swan
SSG Warren Swan
10 y
That sounds really good in principle except the only people directly affected by that scenario would be SSG and below. SFC maybe depending on unit, and maybe some junior officers. Don't know about your experiences, but some of the worst offenders weren't those who would be affected, but those who actually write the policies and those SNCO's that enforce them. But in spirit of this thread, I agree that before graduation of AIT the Soldier should have passed his APFT and H/W if required. I know when I graduated AIT and reported in I was told I had 30 days and I would be taking a record APFT with H/W. I made mine, but a few guys I was in AIT with in my unit didn't. They were flagged and given 90 days to comply in which they all did. Policies shouldn't be selectively/conveniently enforced (but they are), but should have in place safeguards that prevent casual misinterpretations or interpretations that stretch the spirit of the reg.
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SFC Seth King
SFC Seth King
10 y
SSG, remember this is new Soldiers we are talking about in this thread. If you don't like thier fitness level, put those stripes to work and do something about it! Rehabilitate or PT the hell outta the joes. Booting Soldiers is a shortcut and will only hurt your team's ability to accomplish a mission in the long run. I would rather have a slow and fat Soldier than no Soldier at all (someone has to be the staff duty runner).
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SFC Combat Engineer
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10 y
Some soldiers just cant do it. These are the ones who never should have been recruited. You should have to pass an APFT before basic. Of course there is no program for this. Maybe someday.
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1stSgt Sergeant Major/First Sergeant
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Marine Corps has been doing that for years. I assumed the Army did the same thing.
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Sgt Aaron Kennedy, MS
Sgt Aaron Kennedy, MS
10 y
This surprised me as well. But, there are so many "cultural differences" between the USMC and Army.
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SFC Combat Engineer
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10 y
No we don't and I had no idea the Marines did this. The Army needs to get it together in this aspect.
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