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Does anybody know what the USAF tends to do when people with a directly
translatable skill, i.e. civilian aircraft mechanics or computer programmers, enlist? I expect that they would have to go through basic training, but would they have to go through the entire course of technical training that somebody with no experience in the skill would have to go through? Thanks. |
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Yes. Everyone becomes an 1-level student out of Basic. Some with experience,
or high aptitude scores, are allowed to self-pace and graduate early. When you arrive at your first base, you will be an apprentice, and however fast you want to go to journeyman is up to you. Everyone is given 1 year, I seem to recall. You have to be 95% complete on your skills training, and have taken a written test. They called apprentice's 3-level's and journeymen were 5-levels. When you make NCO status, you usually are skilled enough to be a supervisor, and they call that a 7-level. The little screw-drivers you see clipped to the fatigue pockets, are called 7-level screwdrivers :-) With self-pace, you can be out of tech school pretty fast, but tech school is usually 36 weeks of party-time and lustful frolic, that I can't imagine anyone wanting to end it early... Unless you are poor, I wouldn't recommend enlisting. You really want to be an officer in today's military. Trust me, I was both, and being enlisted anything, is like being a 12 year old for life. No respect. "Steven Wagner" wrote Does anybody know what the USAF tends to do when people with a directly translatable skill, i.e. civilian aircraft mechanics or computer programmers, enlist? I expect that they would have to go through basic training, but would they have to go through the entire course of technical training that somebody with no experience in the skill would have to go through? |
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![]() "D. Strang" wrote in message news:_SK7c.127$zc1.118@okepread03... With self-pace, you can be out of tech school pretty fast, but tech school is usually 36 weeks of party-time and lustful frolic, that I can't imagine anyone wanting to end it early... Yes! And not only that... There is no such thing as a school where you do not learn something. You are mortgaging part of your life for that military education, don't let them get off cheap. Even at 18, I was smart enough to pass up the accelerated deal. Smart, but naive... Unless you are poor, I wouldn't recommend enlisting. You really want to be an officer in today's military. Trust me, I was both, and being enlisted anything, is like being a 12 year old for life. No respect. Yes again! I joined the Navy naively thinking that I would "work my way up to officer" and make a career out of it. It was a full two years before I fathomed the social distinction between an officer and an enlisted man. Ever having been enlisted taints you for life and makes you a second-class sub-human. Yes, there are respected "mustangs" who make the jump from enlisted to officer status, but they are seen as limited specialists and rarely progress much past O3. Vaughn |
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On Tue, 23 Mar 2004 00:27:53 GMT, "Vaughn"
disturbed the phosphur particles on my screen with the following: Yes again! I joined the Navy naively thinking that I would "work my way up to officer" and make a career out of it. It was a full two years before I fathomed the social distinction between an officer and an enlisted man. Ever having been enlisted taints you for life and makes you a second-class sub-human. I'll never forget a squadron announcement posted one day in 1958: "Officers and their ladies , enlisted men and their wives are invited to the squadron party this weekend." Enlisted men couldn't possibly marry ladies. No enlisted men showed up...... |
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![]() "Greasy Rider" wrote in message ... On Tue, 23 Mar 2004 00:27:53 GMT, "Vaughn" disturbed the phosphur particles on my screen with the following: Yes again! I joined the Navy naively thinking that I would "work my way up to officer" and make a career out of it. It was a full two years before I fathomed the social distinction between an officer and an enlisted man. Ever having been enlisted taints you for life and makes you a second-class sub-human. I'll never forget a squadron announcement posted one day in 1958: "Officers and their ladies , enlisted men and their wives are invited to the squadron party this weekend." Enlisted men couldn't possibly marry ladies. No enlisted men showed up...... I didn't join til '75 but I understand back then they issued wives to enlisted men, something about getting the CO's permission. |
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Steven Wagner wrote:
Does anybody know what the USAF tends to do when people with a directly translatable skill, i.e. civilian aircraft mechanics or computer programmers, enlist? It depends whether or not they are found qualified for their desired field. A civilian mechanic would surely score high enough to be used in that capacity - but a programmer might not be well versed in electronics (which is the area from which programmers are selected, if they can be spared from their warskill electronics AFSC). Aside from common elements of electronics which everyone should have learned in a high school physical science course, the surprise is that excellent spacial relations - mental "eyeball" geometry - are absolutely essential qualities for entry into the upper echelons of USAF electronics fields (which, as I have said, include programming as a minor, but related, element). There are a few places for windows wizards and networking gurus, of course - but these are essentially administrative- maintenance slots, often filled by on-base glad-handers seeking a break from flightline duties. If you can determine what a number of very oddly-shaped boxes would look like - if unfolded flat - you might qualify. I expect that they would have to go through basic training, but would they have to go through the entire course of technical training that somebody with no experience in the skill would have to go through? You really wouldn't want to skip through tech school. Classes six hours per day, (for up to a year) with the rest of the time essentially free; the college grads among the guys with which I atttended compared it very favorably with their carefree days at school: lots of beer and free time. Though drafted during the Tet offensive, I ended up in the USAF, committed to an "electronics" career. Coming out of Basic Training, the orders read "Armament Systems Operator/Maintenance (Pool)": I would be a 32010 unskilled "helper" while I attended tech school. Fortunately, I ended up in the very first AN/APQ-120 Weapons Control Systems class anywhere; it was the system used on the (then) brand- new F-4E aircraft. One of the eight in my class had worked for McDonnel-Douglas as a civilian, installing and aligning the older AN/AWG-10 systems in Navy F-4s. He skipped the electronics fundamentals portions (about four months of training) and flunked out shortly before graduating. (Lucky for him, they kept him on at Lowry AFB anyway - maintaining the trainers on midnight shift. He thus avoided the Vietnam war.) Almost a year later, we graduated as 32231Q "semi-skilled" WCS troops. We thought we knew it all. Instead, we knew very little. Check out section 3.a ("knowledge requirements") for a fully- qualified 7-level technician from about a hundred years ago (1982): http://www.geocities.com/32271q/afsc.htm A number of these guys chose to do their "guaranteed year in the states" (between overseas tours) as 305X0 Computer Programmers, instead of staying current on the weapons system. Since we were a "Chronic, critical-shortage CONUS/OVERSEAS imbalance" AFSC, the USAF permitted such a 365-day "break" between the overseas tours. Today, the AFSC numbers have been changed, as have the aircraft systems - but there is no shortcut to success. Besides - Uncle Sam may know that you are actually more qualified for a different role - other than the one you chose in civilian life... and if my experience is any guide, Uncle is rarely wrong in this. You may find a whole new career, which actually uses ALL of your hidden talents. - John T., former Msgt, USAF, WCS |
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On Mon, 22 Mar 2004 17:43:52 -0600, "D. Strang"
wrote: [stuff snipped] Unless you are poor, I wouldn't recommend enlisting. You really want to be an officer in today's military. Trust me, I was both, and being enlisted anything, is like being a 12 year old for life. No respect. And your C.O. acts like they are your daddy, mommy, and school principal all rolled into one. John Hairell |
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On Tue, 23 Mar 2004 11:31:16 -0500, John Hairell
wrote: On Mon, 22 Mar 2004 17:43:52 -0600, "D. Strang" wrote: [stuff snipped] Unless you are poor, I wouldn't recommend enlisting. You really want to be an officer in today's military. Trust me, I was both, and being enlisted anything, is like being a 12 year old for life. No respect. And your C.O. acts like they are your daddy, mommy, and school principal all rolled into one. John Hairell Amazing. First, we've got an enlisted person who became an officer who characterizes the treatment of enlisted personnel as "like being a 12-year old". Clearly the perception is the reality, but I wonder how someone who rose through the ranks could perpetuate the stereotype. Did you continue, as an officer, to treat your personnel as you perceived you were treated? Or, is it possible that there are some officers (I'll contend a lot of them,) who respect their subordinates, depend upon them for support and value their expertise? And, then, we've got another stereotype--the C.O. who acts like "daddy, mommy and school principal". Well, certainly there are instances in which the age of the commander and the youth (and concommitant immaturity) of the lower ranking enlisted merits such treatment. But to extend the metaphor to establish the standard is patently absurd. Let's acknowledge first, that most C.O.s deal through chain of command. Their attitudes, information, and reactions are filtered through levels of junior officers and NCOs. There are some organizations in which the C.O. does deal with the lowest ranks, but in most units, there are several levels. Or, maybe you didn't mean C.O., but rather simply meant "supervisor"--then you've still got to deal with different ages, levels of maturity, and degrees of technical expertise. "Daddy, mommy and school principal" are responsible for enforcing discipline and achieving results whether in the military or the family or corporate America. If required, that's sometime the way it is. But, in most successful organization respect is a two-way street. Show me a unit which routinely demeans the enlisted personnel without respect for their capabilities and I'll show you a failed unit. Ed Rasimus Fighter Pilot (USAF-Ret) "When Thunder Rolled" Smithsonian Institution Press ISBN #1-58834-103-8 |
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"Ed Rasimus" wrote
Amazing. First, we've got an enlisted person who became an officer who characterizes the treatment of enlisted personnel as "like being a 12-year old". I should have said that this treatment mostly comes from higher-rank enlisted personnel. The reason I wanted to become an officer, was because of several role models (we'd call them mentors today). One was a Major, another was a Captain. During my first combat tour, I was basically fearless. I found that most of the people who got killed were always doing the wrong thing. The Captain told me I had the right instincts, in that when it looks like you are going to die, then the best thing to do is attack. If you circle the wagons (go defense), you die. The enemy has the coordinates of people standing still :-) Clearly the perception is the reality, but I wonder how someone who rose through the ranks could perpetuate the stereotype. Did you continue, as an officer, to treat your personnel as you perceived you were treated? One of the first things I learned (it wasn't obvious), was that you end up mothering your men. The object is to get them through their tour. There's always one guy who has the IQ of a turd, and these guys are always popular. You have to really brow-beat the men and find ways to get their attention. Especially after losing five or six guys in one battle. They are either very depressed, or very ****ed off, and it takes constant commands to focus the battle. If you're lucky you have at least one NCO, who is meaner than you could ever be. My experience as an enlisted man was very bad (outside of combat). When you are in the states or some overseas cesspool, just putting in time, then everyone wants a piece of you for slave labor. I was once grabbed off the street, and found myself unloading railroad cars. We had a couple radar troops with us. They felt they were just slaves. You would never find officers doing that kind of work. But you would find college graduate highly technical specialists just cannabolized for the body count. We broke a lot of stuff just to get even. Or, is it possible that there are some officers (I'll contend a lot of them,) who respect their subordinates, depend upon them for support and value their expertise? It all makes sense until you see the daily detail list. E-7's driving bus, E-8 inventory the clothing store, E-5 waxing the bowling alley, etc. Then you go to your real job. And, then, we've got another stereotype--the C.O. who acts like "daddy, mommy and school principal". Well, certainly there are instances in which the age of the commander and the youth (and concommitant immaturity) of the lower ranking enlisted merits such treatment. But to extend the metaphor to establish the standard is patently absurd. During my commanders welcome meeting in his office, we all sat at his table and told him he had a terrible moral problem. I wasn't there a week, and I found the place a disaster. He looked us square in the face and said he will make sure all of us would wish we were never born, jumped-up and yelled to get the hell out of his office. He lasted another month before the Colonel got rid of him, but the damage was done, and we were just enlisted people, so suck it up. Let's acknowledge first, that most C.O.s deal through chain of command. Their attitudes, information, and reactions are filtered through levels of junior officers and NCOs. There are some organizations in which the C.O. does deal with the lowest ranks, but in most units, there are several levels. Or, maybe you didn't mean C.O., but rather simply meant "supervisor"--then you've still got to deal with different ages, levels of maturity, and degrees of technical expertise. In my example above, the higher enlisted ranks were almost never to be found. The commander had no eyes and ears. I agree with you on this. Show me a unit which routinely demeans the enlisted personnel without respect for their capabilities and I'll show you a failed unit. All I have to do is go into a squadron and look at the detail list, or watch all the enlisted troops picking up trash with their garbage bags dragging behind them to know that nothing has changed. |
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