by Master Sgt. Mike R. Smith
I.G. Brown Training and Education Center
8/15/2013 - MCGHEE TYSON AIR NATIONAL GUARD BASE, Tenn. -- Tech.
Sgt. Lakisha Croley from the 1st Combat Camera Squadron is putting
together her photo album on what she did this summer: Noncommissioned
Officer Academy.
Croley is an active duty Air Force photographer assigned at Joint Base
Charleston in South Carolina. For the last six weeks she studied
leadership here at the I.G. Brown Training and Education Center, so she
decided to photograph the experience.
"It's really out of habit," said Croley. "Whenever I go TDY, if I can
bring my own camera equipment and just document what I'm doing and what
I'm going through, I do that just to tell the story."
Croley serves in the largest of four Air Force combat camera squadrons.
The squadrons give Defense leaders and the public firsthand images
"during wartime, worldwide crises, contingencies, joint exercises, and
other events," said officials.
"I like our purpose," she said. "I like that we are telling the military
story and letting the public know what we are doing too."
She took hundreds of images on campus this summer, but her real focus
was on future opportunities because Noncommissioned Officer Academy is
needed for her next promotion.
The TEC's Paul H. Lankford EPME Center - a detachment of the Air
National Guard Readiness Center - delivers both NCOA and Airman
Leadership School to thousands of Total Air Force students each year, as
well as Coast Guard and international students.
"I feel very lucky to have the opportunity to come here," she said.
She said her favorite part of the academy was learning the "Four Lenses"
- a lesson that clarifies personality traits and their effect on
communication and understanding.
"I want to be a good supervisor, and I want to take care of, and understand, my people," she said.
Croley said that an understanding of others can also be communicated
through a camera's lens. She photographed candid images of service
members in oversees contingency operations that helped communicate their
service to viewers around the world.
"I think what makes a good military photo is a powerful image, something
that needs no caption and evokes an emotion," said Croley.
Of the many moments she captured here, her favorite
was of students training in the Profession of Arms - especially reveille
and retreat practice with the flag.
"With the mix of Guard and Reserve and the active duty and
international, there's some of us that don't do it very often," she
said. "And [I liked] just capturing how people evolved into a working
group," she said.
Croley plans to share her photographs with her classmates, so their summer scrapbooks can also hold memories at TEC.
"It's been a good experience, said Croley. "I've learned a lot."
Thursday, August 15, 2013
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