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Command Post What is this?
Posted on Aug 15, 2018
SGT Joseph Gunderson
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1SG Dale Cantrell
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My take , 90% of NCOs and 50% officers are teachers. But the troop you use for VIPs ,make the best teachers
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LT Brad McInnis
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NCO's are teachers... not to be the d@ckhead LT, but maybe when talking about teaching and standards they should find an airman without a No Shave Chit... just saying...
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SGT Joseph Gunderson
SGT Joseph Gunderson
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There is nothing that an NCO can really do about that. Perhaps docs and PAs should quit handing them out to people just to make them stop whining. A profile must be adhered to by the leadership though.
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LT Brad McInnis
LT Brad McInnis
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SGT Joseph Gunderson - I agree, I am just saying that of all the airmen they could have chosen for the picture, they chose one with a no shave chit..
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SSG Harry Outcalt
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It the teaching environment was more military oriented then it would be possible, if not then not much chance ... I had an opportunity to spend some time at a military academy ,observing giving advice and providing support to cadets as young as 7 on up to high school and compared to public school it was much like night n day , we all see this difference in environment daily since we ourselves have been exposed upon entering military service the discipline of the young and attitude much different...
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LTC Kevin B.
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"Everyone has heard the saying 'those who cannot do teach'. The fact is that this has been the case for far too long."

Assumption, stated as fact.
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SGT Joseph Gunderson
SGT Joseph Gunderson
>1 y
Noted, but the entire piece is "assumption, stated as fact"... It's a personal opinion. Also, it was supposed to be read as if the fact that the saying survives has been going on too long. I could have worded that part better.
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SGT Joseph Gunderson
SGT Joseph Gunderson
>1 y
Nevermind, I just reread the piece, I stick by what I said in it. Although a general assumption, it is one that I can point to examples for.
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LTC Kevin B.
LTC Kevin B.
>1 y
SGT Joseph Gunderson - As you stated "It's a personal opinion."
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SSgt Bruce Probert
SSgt Bruce Probert
>1 y
It is always dangerous to allow those who can't, try to teach what they don't under stand. But you don't often have some one to teach the assault who's done it a hundred times or more. The quickest way to find out where you are deficient in your ability is to try and teach it. The choice of an instructor especially in the martial arts isn't just important, learn it wrong and you are a casualty.
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Wayne Soares
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Great share
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SGT Joseph Gunderson your description of my generation (particularly those slightly younger than me) is spot-on. Unfortunately, I feel that the biggest issue (potentially) facing American youth is the lack of a strong work ethic. Maybe this is due to life simply becoming easier on average, more “handouts”, a lack of being challenged - whatever the cause, the effect is a generally less intrinsically motivated work force (why have pride in your work if you’ve never really been challenged?), and a sense of “why should I adapt to become a better worker? Let me have my workplace, surroundings, coworkers, etc adapt to ME, so I can be more comfortable”.
Sorry, I’ll get off my soapbox now. Thanks for the share.
Jerry Rivas
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These little bastards today need USMC DI's for teachers.
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PO2 Mark Chambers
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I served as a PO2 in the Navy for four years when I recieved a medical discharge, but I have been an educator at the secondary and post-secondary level now for over 30 years. I believe that the Navy taught me some very important lessons that I still use today both in my work and in my personal life. And the most important of those lessons, Honor, Courage, and Committment. These values have become my credo. Character triats that I have always tried to demonstrate to my classes and students. And now that I am an academic advisor, these are traits that I believe I can demonstrate to my advisees as important values for work and life.
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MAJ William Smith
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I hold an Ed.D. and have 34 years of experience as an educator. I joined the Army National Guard as soon as I got my first teaching appointment. My Drill Sergeants had far more influence on my classroom management and instructional style than my graduate professors. They taught me which things are black and white as opposed to grey and they taught me to carry on with dignity and a sense of humor.
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SGT Joseph Gunderson
SGT Joseph Gunderson
>1 y
I'm presently working my way through an MA I hope to have finished within a year, and I'm planning on going forward to a PhD with an intent to teach. There are too few of us (veterans/SMs) participating in the education of our young people, and I believe it is really starting to show. You admitted it yourself, that your DSs effected you far greater than any professor; we need to bring the same motivation, discipline, and spirit to the classrooms, and that doesn't mean bringing Drills into the classroom, rather, the foundational principles that make those individuals so effective in their mission.
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MAJ William Smith
MAJ William Smith
>1 y
Yes. I find that teens are hungry for reality. They know they are getting BS'd, but can't put their fingers on it because they are inexperienced with life. They are at risk of internalizing the BS and spending their lives fragile and "woke."

I don't talk about the Army or drill them. Instead, I base my instruction in reality and have a firm and non-negotiable set of lines that cannot be crossed. They seem to find that attractive rather than off-putting. This is especially true of the male students.

Of course, my subject is chemistry and that is a much easier subject to base in reality than "social studies."
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1LT Engineer Officer
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I totally agree with your assessment. Without trying to sound like a "conspiracy theorist", the dumbing down and pushing the philosophy that people should not be held accountable for their actions/ inaction is "okay" is undermining our society as a whole, the military in particular. Anyone that has a lack of integrity, shows disloyalty to the US (that does not mean those that disagree with politically "correctness", etc.) have no place in our military....PERIOD
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