Michael Dorosh said:
University, by its nature, offers no benefits to the potential military officer that can't be found elsewhere. Encourage post secondary education, sure. Demand it? You're just limiting yourself, since you also admit that university will mean different things to different people.
I fail to understand how education could be limiting. This is a contradiction in terms, in my opinion. I do agree that some of the benefits of post secondary education can be gained elsewhere, but nowhere in so compact and focused a manner except possibly a very good staff college, which I could accept but for the fact that the education delivered at staff college tends to be somewhat narrow.
You also admit university will not teach anything about the nuts and bolts of the military profession to the potential officer.
Yes, I did: I've said that twice now. However I've also said that that is not the point of obtaining a degree, per se. The only cases in which the"nuts and bolts" are directly transferable from PSE are those of officers in technical specialties. In my opinion the combat arms officer (who forms the backbone of the command and staff structure of any Army) gains from the second order effects of PSE, which I have described previously.
Infanteer's proposal makes sense - requiring a performing arts degree in order to be a shop manager in a service battalion is pretty much out to lunch.
Yes, of course it is. That really isn't the point, either.
You've done nothing but speak in vague generalities, perhaps if you gave an example of some of these "tools and opportunities" university is supposed to "provide" you might make a stronger case, but frankly, you speak as if you've never set foot in one but rather read about one on the internet at some point, or perhaps are on the board of governors of one in financial trouble.
My goodness-that was rather stiff, wasn't it? I've already explained elsewhere what I believe the benefits are: they are preciesly those broad attributes that you dismiss as "vague generalities". In my mind, they are the most valuable (although not the only) things that PSE can bestow, and IMHO they are developed most effectively by an arts or humanities-centred education, although I certainly am not dismissing the hard sciences. I hold a BA in Political Studies and Psychology, and I have completed the residency USMC Command and Staff College (97/98) which is certified as a post-graduate program in the US. I came to PSE quite late in life, getting my degree after 26 years of non- and -commissioned service.
I do like the old General Staff system, and perhaps we need to return to that. Sort of a two-tiered officer structure?
We never had this system in our Army. We have considered it, but have never adopted it.
The German officer candidate in the first part of the 20th Century (and maybe post WW II, I don't know) served in a field unit as an Officer Aspirrant, as a junior NCM, then as a junior NCO, a senior NCO and finally passed out as an officer.
I wonder what reference you are basing this on. In fact, I think you will find that except in wartime, most early 20th century German officers were products of cadet academies like Lichterfelde. I think you are referring to the
Offiziere Anwarter system that brought officer candidates through the ranks. Before WWI, only a limited number of officers came from the ranks. In WWI, the pressure of officer casualties and the huge size of the Army required the Germans to commission men that they ordinarily would not have. During the post 1919 Weimar Republic, I believe that the Reichsheer NCO development process would have taken too long to produce officers to permit them to be cycled through the NCO ranks as you have suggested. In WWII, the Offiziere Anwarter system was used, as was mass commissioning of NCOs.
In our system, they may or may not serve as NCMs without aspirant status, and once they signal their intention to become an officer, the Officer Cadet is plucked from the ranks and given over to the officers.
"Given over to the officers..." Blindfolded, kicking and screaming, no doubt. A horrid fate! Actually, most of his initial training will be done by NCOs, who will continue to train him at least to company grade appointment.
He has no commissioned status, but he has all the priveleges of the officers
Hmmm-I don't recall too many "priveliges" as an Officer Candiate. In fact, I seem to recall looking back with fond regret on my lost status as an NCO.
and does little or no work with the "men" nor does he have supervisory status from what I can tell.
Nor should he, in my opinion, at that level of experience. (Hence my original suggestion about requiring officers to do time in the ranks)
I would suggest a change to the German system, where he works with the men for a year or two, gaining in supervisory experience and status along the way - make an officer cadet have three grades - equal to a private, to a Master Corporal, and to a Warrant Officer, so he can experience small party leadership in a "real" setting.
As I said earlier, I don't think this is actually the "German system". I'll have to ask the German guys here.
Then the second class - the General Staff class. The professional officer, for whom a post-secondary education is required, preferably along the lines of Infanteer's model. Stick with the current Officer Cadet status for him, have him concentrate on operations, planning, logistics, history, etc. Mold him to be a high level commander, or senior staff officer. He's the one who "needs" university, not a junior troop leader.
I'm not sure what Army you believe you are modelling this on, but it certainly was not the German Army of either WW, or of today. Under the German system, officers moved between General Staff and troop command appointments for almost their entire careers. They still do it (I work with several German officers here in ISAF), and for the same reason we do: the professional health of the Army. Strictly dividing the command stream from the staff stream will result in troop leading being done by parochial ignoramuses, and staff work being done by cloistered, detached airheads who never had mud on their boots. Your closing comment reveals the narrow focus I spoke of: officers do not remain as "junior troop leaders": they move on to serve the Army in other, broader ways.If we offer PSE only to those groomed for higher office, we create two classes of officers again. The benefits of PSE apply to all officers, if only they will open their minds to accept that fact. Cheers.