by Master Sgt. Michael Voss
Air University Public Affairs
4/11/2013 - MAXWELL AIR FORCE BASE, Ala. (AFNS) -- Dating
back to September 1947, Air Force military training instructors have
represented one of the most visible special-duty career fields in the
service.
From the original group of "flight marchers" to today's MTIs, the need to train new Airmen has remained constant.
Today, 500 Airmen in the grades of staff sergeant through master
sergeant work tirelessly planning, organizing and directing basic and
initial military training for 35,000 new recruits each year at Joint
Base San Antonio-Lackland.
Though not as large in number as their counterparts at Lackland, nine
MTIs head to work each morning at the Air Force Officer Training School
on Maxwell AFB, where they train the more than 1,000 officer trainees
who receive their commissions from the school annually.
MTIs started reporting for duty at Maxwell AFB in 1993 after the school
moved from Lackland's Medina Annex to Maxwell AFB as part of the
then-Air Force chief of staff's vision to align all officer education
and training under Air University. OTS is part of the Jeanne M. Holm
Center for Officer Accessions and Citizen Development.
"The level of responsibility and self-discipline required to do this job
is very high," said MTI Tech. Sgt. Paul Baisden. "MTIs here are not
dealing with basic trainees who may have just graduated from high
school; we're dealing with officer trainees who have graduated college
and some of them have prior enlisted service."
Baisden, like all MTIs at OTS, has experienced first-hand the difference
between being an MTI at basic training and OTS. Because of the unique
demands at OTS, the MTIs here have gone through a rigorous screening
process, and before applying as an instructor, each applicant is
required to complete a three-year tour at Lackland. Baisden has worn the
MTI hat for eight years, three of which have been at Maxwell AFB.
"Here, you're also dealing with commissioned staff a lot more often than
you would if you were at Lackland, so the interaction between the
officer and the enlisted staffs is very involved," he said.
The road to becoming an MTI will deter some from applying for the
special duty, but becoming an OTS instructor is a process that few of
those who are MTIs will attempt. MTI training is eight weeks, followed
by a 90-day certification period, during which a trainee will become
fully qualified on 121 tasks and evaluated on teaching drill.
"The application process for OTS MTI duty is very selective," said
Tech. Sgt. Chi Yi, an MTI. "There were more than 40 applicants recently,
and only four were hired."
For Baisden, his dream of becoming an MTI started long before he ever wore the hat.
"I went to high school in Texas, and I was in Air Force Junior ROTC," he
said. "Being so close to San Antonio, we would take trips to Lackland
all the time. I would see the guys with the big hats walking around
training young Airmen, and that made me want to be one of them."
For most officer trainees, this will be the first time they've interacted with enlisted members.
"MTIs try to provide them with the enlisted perspective as much as
possible," Baisden said. "We teach them that we're all Airmen, and we
need to take care of each other regardless of rank. We tell them that
they need to seek out their NCOs at their first duty stations because
they have been around and they are a wealth of leadership and knowledge
that will be invaluable."
OTS also commissions Air Guard and Reserve officers, so the impact MTIs
have on officer trainees also extends to outside the gates and into the
civilian workplace, Baisden said.
"We are the first example of what an NCO should be," said MTI Master
Sgt. Anthony S. Key. "Being an OTS MTI is more about relationship
building between officers and NCOs." Key, a former civil engineer, has
been a MTI 13 years.
For the OTS MTIs, having influenced both potential senior enlisted and officer leaders is gratifying.
"There is a definite reward that comes full circle as an OTS military
training instructor, because we went from directly affecting the
enlisted at Lackland, to now directly affecting the officer corps, as
well," said Master Sgt. Antonio Holmes. "The biggest honor is being
asked to give the officer trainee their first salute."
(Staff Sgt. Sandra Percival contributed to this article.)
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