Haggis said:Having taught more leadership and trade course than I care to remember, I found that the students are the biggest source of stress. They quite easily will mentally magnify the consequences of ther actions, partiucularly when thier actions reflect negatively on them.
I've never failed a student, but lots of student have failed my courses. They all fail themselves, through lack of preparation, motivation, desire or skills. I just do the paperwork.
I've been "taught by" people like you. People who make it a sport to see how many potentially good trainees they can wash out. People who don't give a rats tail for the skill or motivation of the student or the needs of the regiments who sent them to learn something as long as they can stroke their own ego by running a "hard" course.
The way you and your kind operate, the student is more focussed on surviving the instructors than assimilating the course content. People like you produced the leaders who made the 90's so enjoyable : for the rest of us. And don't go telling me it was those leaders that got us through the Medak, Sarajevo, Op Storm and held IFOR together. That was the previous generation, before the rampant Ramboizm of the training system.
You ever pulled shyte like that on one of my courses, Mr. Horse, and your keester would be in front of the Old Man so fast your watch would be 4 hours behind.
Sum up.
Haggis said:Having taught more leadership and trade course than I care to remember, I found that the students are the biggest source of stress. They quite easily will mentally magnify the consequences of ther actions, partiucularly when thier actions reflect negatively on them.
I've never failed a student, but lots of student have failed my courses. They all fail themselves, through lack of preparation, motivation, desire or skills. I just do the paperwork.
I've been "taught by" people like you. People who make it a sport to see how many potentially good trainees they can wash out. People who don't give a rats tail for the skill or motivation of the student or the needs of the regiments who sent them to learn something as long as they can stroke their own ego by running a "hard" course.
The way you and your kind operate, the student is more focussed on surviving the instructors than assimilating the course content. People like you produced the leaders who made the 90's so enjoyable : for the rest of us. And don't go telling me it was those leaders that got us through the Medak, Sarajevo, Op Storm and held IFOR together. That was the previous generation, before the rampant Ramboizm of the training system.
You ever pulled shyte like that on one of my courses, Mr. Horse, and your keester would be in front of the Old Man so fast your watch would be 4 hours behind.
Sum up.
Well 3rd Horse3rd Horseman said:Recce guy,
Dido for you, as for Haggis, I am not of the opinion that the courses I ran were eat your own, you are missguided. Possibly you were on a course like that but not at my school. How could you even get "eat your own" out of my post you as well as Haggis are reading too much into the post with your own bitter past.
what he said.Allan Luomala said:I think that "a little bit of this, a little bit of that " approach is the way to handle training. I DESPISE the thought of failing someone (arbitrarily) to send a warning shot across the bow of all students. As someone mentioned earlier, I feel that students fail themselves, and the DS just put the reasons why to paper.
I have lived through both extremes (fail a certain number of pers just to prove that the DS are "gods" and the huggy-kissy pass everyone so that nobody feels bad about themselves). Neither approach works, as nothing is being taught or retained by the students. I think that there needs to be a certain element of fear/stress, to the degree that it enhances performance, but not so much that it is counter-productive.
We need to, above and beyond anything else, train pers to be able to go to war with the skills they need. If that means someone fails a few "traces" or attacks, etc, but learn from it, and then achieve a set standard (we use the goal of "Would I want student A to be a Jr car commander/Tp ldr/Patrol Commander in my regiment, with my soldiers?" If the answer is "NO!!!", then that individual fails (that particular trace). Everyone has good days, and bad days, and there shouldn't be a crushing amount of stress placed on a person (during initial training) just to break them. Wait until they are ready before cranking it up to that degree. Obviously, if they never get to the point during the course where that is possible, recourse them, and they can try again.
One mentality that I also hate is the "I don't want this person in my mess" mentality. It's not up to you, or me, or anyone but the person's CO, RSM, or career manager to make that decision. I'm sure more than a few capable NCO's (and officers) were run aground because somebody thought that way. There have been more than a few people I hate that I passed, and more than a few people that I like that I had to fail, but that was based on their performance, not my opinion of them. Surely they would argue this, but that's their prerogative.
Training has to be progressive, and challenging. If someone starts out above the pass mark, make them work harder, so they leave at the best they can be. If they start out below the 60%, bring them up to at least 60%, and then push them to do their best. DS are not assesors in the driver examiner sense: they should teach, teach, and then teach some more, and then at the end, they can assess where the individual is. I hate "clipboard commandos" who do nothing more than mark a score on a sheet, and give nothing of themselves to the student. I suspect that is usually because those types have nothing (but c*ck) to give. Pathetic, really.
I do agree though, that stress has to be built into the training, at all levels, but not until the bulk of the teaching has been done, to ensure that the maximum of learning, teaching, and retention has occured. It's a difficult balance, but that is why we are paid the big bucks, and why we have people that do studies (hopefully realistic and useful ones), and why we observe other countries, industries, etc to see how they do it, because you should always try to learn from other's successes and failures, so that our soldiers don't have to suffer needlessly.
Al
3rd Horseman said:Recce guy,
Dido for you,
3rd Horseman said:Haggis, I was the old man
J. Gayson said:Please, I started this topic to discuss psychological stress on course,
Not who demoted who.
Bruce Monkhouse said:MODERATOR EDIT: LETS KEEP IT ON TOPIC EVERYONE OR IT WILL BE "DILDOS TO YOU"...or ditto or dido or somin'
3rd Horseman said:We always looked to fail someone during each phase of the training to ensure everyone knew they could be next if they failed a task.
3rd Horseman said:Re read my post it is about stress induced training through sleep deprivation, exposure to the elements, task stress and then measuring the results based on the time line over a 7 day EX in side a 60 day course.
3rd Horseman said:Recce guy, nice of you to assist me with my typos and spell errors normally I have a secretary do that.
3rd Horseman said:I don't through around revenge demotes you got one from me and until you post more crap I wont give you another.
3rd Horseman said:simple said it was the fear of failling that got a few of you wired up chill and read it in context.
3rd Horseman said:More to the point about this thread I don't think the creator is expecting a dual of stupidity over a request for stress that occurs on course shall we get back to the point rather than chucking crap at each other?
J,J. Gayson said:Since leadership courses have come into the picture,
do instructors tend to place more mental stress (having to apply leadership) then physical stress?
depends entirely on the candidate. Everybody is different. Some are natural leaders - unflappable, calm, and confident (or able to appear so). Others are basket-cases.How do most candidates tend to react to the stresses of being given a leadership role?