Tango2Bravo said:
The Staff College in Kingston is a critical institution that begins the transformation of an officer from his comfort zone of the low-level tactical fight at company level into an officer that understands the larger tactical picture and can operate within a staff employing OPP. To me, it is what enables our officer corps to be a truly professional officer corps.
My impression is that the Army is happy with the standard of the graduates.
I like to compare AOC to the really big block buster movie that everyone is talking about and you are the last person to go see it. Going in, your expectations are very high, and you are anticipating some great life changing event. Unfortunately, at the end you've only seen a good movie and are a little let down ... except, I think AOC was only an "adaquate movie."
It does cover important material and provide an important learning venue for the Army. However, I don't think it is everything that some of the course disciples claim it to be. I did not find it particularly challenging. I think there were several times oportunities were not exploited to drive home deeper lessons on staff operations. I think some people were allowed to wallow in thier comfort areas (both 'B' students and "low C" students). I think the CFLCSC lacks the manpower to develop, maintain, and deliver the top quality programme that we would desire.
Despite that, AOC is an adequate course and I don't doubt that the Army as a whole benefits from it.
Old Sweat said:
... people should not sweat the grades and the assessment unless one is really keen on becoming the CDS, or if you are recommended for gelding to prevent you propagating on the other hand.
Maybe. However, when the commandant's introduction address to the course hammers on the position that merit board "recognize the significance of" and highly wieght the LFCSC course report ... well, if it is true then a disservice is being done to both the members and to the whole Canadian Forces if those course reports are not being written accurately and with a relevant meriting criteria.
The Anti-Royal said:
... course reports make the employability and potential of graduates clear to their chains of command and applicable promotion boards. Promotion boards look at the AOC course report seriously and, depending on MOC, at the letter grade.
Midnight Rambler said:
The write ups are taken seriously, and though I eeked out a C+, I was very pleased with my write up. (That's "Cee-Plus", not a typo for 'Cee-minus', just to be clear ;D)
Tango2Bravo said:
Getting stressed about Cs adn Bs doesn't really achieve anything, either as a student on AOC or a critic of the institution. As has been said it is the narrative that really matters.
I am strongly skeptical that the naratives compensate for the defeciencies of the letter grading system. I state this knowing DS to have handed students thier course reports with an appologiy because narative does not do the students' performance justice. The narratives were conformed to the letter grade and less so to the student performance. We see that the letter grades are awarded as:
A: Exceeded the LCol's standard
B: Greatly exceeded the standard
C+: Exceeded the standard
C: Met the standard
C-: Met the standard with significant difficulty
However, 66 to 75% of students are lumped into that 'C' and CFLCSC standards dictate that the narrative cannot differentiate between "easily met standard" and "met standard with some difficulty." Students may only be described as having "met the standard." With that restriction in place, there is nothing to assist the promotion boards in segregating the bottom third from the middle third.
dapaterson said:
... the fraud of "Weak C" vs "Strong C" that certain staff perpetuate. A C is a C. A grading system should provide an indication of ability; the current system which sees roughly 2/3 of students lumped into a single small band provides little useful information.
That's pretty close to my thoughts.
In the end, I don't see the grading system as CLFCSC's greatest problem though.