The Army’s new pre-basic-training boot camp might actually build better soldiers
Haley Britzky - Yesterday 3:01 PM
Drill sergeants at the Future Soldier Prep Course are not your average drill sergeants.
The instructors at the course, a new initiative launched this summer to help get more potential soldiers qualified to serve, are meant to “inspire” hopeful soldiers more than strike the fear of God into them. There’s no “physical corrective action” for simply looking too happy to be there, or any other mundane issue drill sergeants might find problems with.
“No physical corrective action, is what they call it,” Capt. Nancy Butler, a company commander in the 1st Battalion, 61st Infantry Regiment told Task & Purpose last week. “It just doesn’t have a place in the classroom, it’s actually not very conducive for the learning environment.”
Needless to say, the Future Soldier Prep Course is a new way of doing things. Introduced in July, the course is meant to help get aspiring trainees within Army standards so they can ship off to basic, whether that requires working on their testing scores for the Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery (ASVAB), or doing physical training to be within the weight requirement. The pilot program for the course was started at Fort Jackson, South Carolina, and while it’s still in the early stages, leaders said last week that all signs were pointing to success.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/the-army-s-new-pre-basic-training-boot-camp-might-actually-build-better-soldiers/ar-AA139Ffj?ocid=msedgntp&cvid=de7db7d77ef3443ea1ba989200a405fc