By Senior Airman Katrina M. Brisbin, 36th Wing Public
Affairs / Published September 30, 2015
ANDERSEN AIR FORCE BASE, Guam (AFNS) -- When thinking about
Airman leadership school, what thoughts come to mind?
Many Airmen may think of professional military education as
boring, a box to check or a waste of time.
For me, ALS was none of these things.
ALS is a five-week course that prepares senior airmen, new
staff sergeants and sister service rank equivalents for official supervisory
and rating duties. Attending this leadership school in residence is a
requirement for all Airmen either upon successfully testing for promotion or
upon reaching 48 months time-in-service.
As a mandated stepping stone, to the uninitiated, the
training may come along as just another training requirement on the way to a
long-awaited promotion. It turns out it is more than that.
In all honesty, I was apprehensive as I took my first steps
into the classroom. Little did I know my perspective would drastically change
in just a few short weeks.
The first few days were a blur. We spent the majority of our
time learning the rules, getting a feel for the curriculum and sizing up our
classmates. After everything was laid out by the commandant and instructors --
it was 'game on.'
The 192-hour course, spread across 24 academic days, is
divided into three major curriculum areas that support the course objective and
focus on developing leadership abilities, building effective communication and
the profession of arms. Classes are also required to positively contribute to
their local community as well as create a legacy piece to enrich the
schoolhouse for future generations of students.
The weeks quickly were consumed with academic work. We
participated in group discussions, wrote papers, took written tests, stumbled
through public speaking, braved typhoon rains during our community project and,
more importantly, bonded as service members and future NCOs.
I learned quite a bit about what is expected of an NCO and
leader, while also learning more about how to meet those expectations. Studying
leadership traits in our diverse group of Airmen and Sailors helped broaden my
perspective when it came to the profession of arms, something I think is vital
for today's leaders to understand and practice.
According to our curriculum, to be part of the military
profession of arms is to be a skilled practitioner of, or professional in the
art of warfare. The profession of arms is a unique profession, whose customer
base spans the sum of our great nation.
After reading the paragraph again, I was shocked to realize
I still didn't fully grasp what this meant. As a public affairs Airman, I took
it upon myself to know as much as I can about the Air Force mission, our
polices and tenets, so I could better share Airmen's stories with the rest of
the world. However, the true meaning of 'the profession of arms' eluded me.
In layman's terms, the profession of arms is the basic
understanding that each member brings their own unique skills to the fight.
With this definition, it's a fairly easy concept to understand, but one that
may be difficult to communicate.
So much is changing these days. With a new enlisted
performance report system, forced distribution and the operations tempo, it's
hard to focus at times. It's even harder to stay positive and for some, see how
our daily efforts fuel the fight.
The 36th Wing's mission is to provide the president
sovereign options to decisively employ airpower across the entire spectrum of
engagement. It may be difficult to discern every individual's contribution to
this daunting task.
As reflected in the various occupational badges in our
classroom, we all participate in the same fight. Without force support squadron
Airmen, for instance, the dining facility and gym wouldn't open. There would be
no one to provide vital combat and community support by delivering superior
morale, welfare, recreation, manpower and personnel program services. Without
the finance flight we would have to manage our own pay and accounts while
continuing our daily tasks. The list of services goes on and in short, it would
quickly overwhelm other career fields to cope with the additional workload.
Having our Navy brothers and sister in the class also
provided a comforting reality. This reality is that although we are different
services, we all are NCOs, we all have troops in some form or fashion and we
are all leaders.
The joint leadership school experience was neither boring
nor a waste of time. Because of our productive class dynamic and our skilled
teaching staff, I was able to walk away with a greater understanding of what it
takes to be a supervisor in today's service and rediscovered my place in the
profession of arms.
Each and every person plays a vital role in our military and
has an impact on our mission, and as a photojournalist I feel blessed to be in
the career field that allows me a firsthand look at the Air Force's missions.
After ALS, I can't wait to share how Airman, Sailor, Soldier, Marine and Coast
Guardsman's story in a way that highlights their unique contribution to the
security of our nation.
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