SSG Private RallyPoint Member 118958 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>On the NCOER if you are going to put that your Soldier won a board as a leadership bullet for excellence, shouldn't you be willing to place a needs improvement bullet if your Soldier gets an Article 15? Only taking credit for the good not the bad. 2014-05-05T08:27:22-04:00 SSG Private RallyPoint Member 118958 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>On the NCOER if you are going to put that your Soldier won a board as a leadership bullet for excellence, shouldn't you be willing to place a needs improvement bullet if your Soldier gets an Article 15? Only taking credit for the good not the bad. 2014-05-05T08:27:22-04:00 2014-05-05T08:27:22-04:00 1SG Private RallyPoint Member 118967 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Agree 100%! In fact that is one of the constant, repeated board AAR comments. Raters should really use the 623-23 (AR&amp;DA PAM) when writing NCOERs Response by 1SG Private RallyPoint Member made May 5 at 2014 8:41 AM 2014-05-05T08:41:07-04:00 2014-05-05T08:41:07-04:00 SGM Matthew Quick 118968 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Why, did you train your Soldier to receive the UCMJ, like you did for the board? Response by SGM Matthew Quick made May 5 at 2014 8:42 AM 2014-05-05T08:42:00-04:00 2014-05-05T08:42:00-04:00 1SG Mike Case 118973 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Sure, if you were right there when he committed the action that got him the ART 15 and you didn't do anything to stop it then I am all for that. Now, if your Soldier goes out and robs a store while on leave, why should that reflect negatively on an NCOER of his leader? Response by 1SG Mike Case made May 5 at 2014 8:47 AM 2014-05-05T08:47:10-04:00 2014-05-05T08:47:10-04:00 SSG Private RallyPoint Member 119047 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Here is an example for you. I helped a battle buddy study for the promotion board, however she did I would say about 95% of the work with prepping her uniform, studying, and putting mock boards together. She won the NCO board and then passed the promotion board. Her leader not only did not help her at all but also did not show up as her sponsor. So even though he did nothing he could get away with putting the bullet on his NCOER because his Soldier won the board. I know that this isn't always the case but I have seen it a few times. My challenge to us leaders is that if we would take credit for the good things our Soldiers do then we should also take credit for the bad assuming that what bad they did could have been a result of our poor or lack of leadership. Response by SSG Private RallyPoint Member made May 5 at 2014 10:37 AM 2014-05-05T10:37:27-04:00 2014-05-05T10:37:27-04:00 SFC Private RallyPoint Member 119140 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>If one Soldier wins the board during an rating period, this would not be considered an excellence bullet. It might help counter balance the article 15 down the road, but even without that it's not an excellence. You have to see it in 360, as if a leader has 43 troops and one does it over a year... or perhaps he has one and over a three month time period... I dont see excellence there. Perhaps a rewrite to show the competition of mentored Soldier to win "whatever" over 15 others. The person going before the board might have had very little competition, and it was probably required by the CSM or 1SG before the promotion board. <br />BLUF: a full 360 view should be given on evaluations, and leaders shouldn't have just the good stuff in there. Perhaps their team/section/platoon has a discipline issue, in which the 1SG or rater needs to have written confirmation that the issue existed and was not fixed before the eval and it should reflect, perhaps not with a needs improvement but with a success. Response by SFC Private RallyPoint Member made May 5 at 2014 12:01 PM 2014-05-05T12:01:38-04:00 2014-05-05T12:01:38-04:00 SSG Private RallyPoint Member 136825 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Then wouldn't it be required to put a "needs improvement" bullet if you had not one but two soldiers commit suicide in less than 60 days? I agree that we often put bullets for the NCOs achievements but often don't put a bullet for their failures. This is something we as NCOs need to keep in mind when writing NCOERs. Granted no NCO wants to see someone's career get ruined but if we don't start writing the truth, we will keep getting poor leaders that make poor decisions. Response by SSG Private RallyPoint Member made May 28 at 2014 12:53 PM 2014-05-28T12:53:42-04:00 2014-05-28T12:53:42-04:00 2014-05-05T08:27:22-04:00