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Command Post What is this?
Posted on May 1, 2017
SSgt GG-15 RET Jim Lint
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SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL
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Thanks for sharing
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PFC Roger Goff
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Along with the ability to read and comprehend, your writing will either make you or break you.
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LTC Bill Koski
LTC Bill Koski
>1 y
It has done both to me. After it broke me, I took my assignments seriously, had them proof read, used a tutor, and saw improvement. It made the difference.
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LTC Owner
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Great advice.
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Writing: A Universal Skill for your Military & Post-Military Career
CPT Robert Hoffman
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As a former Army Aviation Officer and retired Det. Sgt. (Homicide) I could not agree more. Keep it short, keep it concise, keep it accurate. It's not a Novel. Also, don't use a pen that will run in the rain!
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SMSgt Lawrence McCarter
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Once upon a time, many years ago We were actually taught how to hold a pen properly, how to form the letters and the handwriting could be easily read. We were taught how to write sentences, paragraphs, the rules of grammar, spelling and other skills to communicate with the written word. Typewriters were a method of producing neat clear reports and communications where the majority of the skills need in handwritten presentations was still very much in play. There was also a publication called a dictionary to insure that Your spelling was correct. All these elements of learning seemed to work very well. I have no particular objection to advances such as word processing, I use them however it seems We allow the new machines to correct our errors and without them many seem unable to function and actually do anything the unless they are available. Despite these new tools it doesn't seem that many needed basic skills had remained or even learned in the process. If this new technology became unavailable how may could still communicate on paper using just a pen ?
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SSgt GG-15 RET Jim Lint
SSgt GG-15 RET Jim Lint
8 y
One thing I learned from new Asian immigrants...many can not read cursive writing. Many international people who did not learn Latin script or English script. But, how many of us can read Hangul, various Chinese or even Russian that is handwritten? Especially when written fast.
Of course, most people can not read my handwriting...and that is you English speakers. My Korean is written slowly and better than some Koreans who write fast. To answer your question, I can make a living on a computer. I get cussed out in English and other languages if someone has to read my handwriting. So far, since 1986, I have owned a computer, and I have survived...
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SFC Jim Ruether
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Edited >1 y ago
Interview anyone these days for a job and they will show up with a brand spanking new resume typed on 20 # paper and double spaced for your reading pleasure. Now give them a blank sheet of paper and tell them to write in cursive or print a small note explaining their absence from a pretend board meeting held today that they missed? What will happen will shock most of you. Upper and lower case letters in the same word throughout the paragraph, if you get a paragraph from them at all with some imaginative excuse for missing the meeting. Some people left my business without even trying. They graduated from high school and no one taught them penmanship. They went onto college and word processors waited for them there. The need to write with a pen or pencil was unnecessary. How can these young adults communicate with another person without their lap top or smart phone? How will they read a birthday card or a personal note from a friend? How will they read changes on a blueprint or a manufacturers direction on reducing the width of a fitting? Can you tell this bothers me?
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SSgt GG-15 RET Jim Lint
SSgt GG-15 RET Jim Lint
>1 y
Actually, it seems now people send E-Bday Cards... Most of them have spyware that will bloat your computer.
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MSgt Vernon Anderson
MSgt Vernon Anderson
>1 y
They dont TEACH writing in school anymore - graduates cannot read/spell putting ideas down on paper/You have to communicate thought and ideas with other or you will fail.
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Erman Alkan
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Thanks..
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LTC Deputy Surface Maintenance Manager
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Great article! I believe people should prepare themselves for writing in the workplace. A great place to start to understand the current trends is PL 111-274 Plain Writing Act of 2010. Beyond that, look into the Federal Plain Language Guidelines, US Government Printing Office Style Manual, The Elements of Style, and English Simplified (13th Edition). Some of these are government-focused, but in my opinion, they translate to the civilian workforce just as well. And there are always my "go-to" Army guides, AR 25-50 Preparing and Managing Correspondence, and the obsolete DA PAM 600-67 Effective Writing for Army Leaders. Cheers!
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SGT Matthew S.
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After I got out of the military and started college, I considered myself a good writer. In fact, I was angry when I had to take a borderline-remedial writing class early on. Looking back, though, I shake my head when I re-read papers I wrote back then.

Taking a class, learning, and practicing are a necessity. You never know how much you don't know.

For me, though, by "writing" I also mean typing. My handwriting is atrocious, and always has been despite my best efforts. Unless I slowly and painstakingly write the letters, it turns out in varying degrees of awful.
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LTC Ivan Raiklin, Esq.
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Thanks!
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