by Staff Sgt. Natasha Stannard
42nd Air Base Wing Public Affairs
9/9/2014 - MAXWELL AIR FORCE BASE, Ala. -- To
align with the chief of staff of the Air Force's vision to give more
company grade officers the opportunity to attend Squadron Officer
School, Squadron Officer College is changing the school's course term
length from eight to five weeks starting in fiscal year 2015.
The school challenges students from differing specialties to step out of
their comfort zones by having them work collectively to accomplish
exercises that involve team building in a leadership laboratory.
"Changing the class length will not hinder the opportunity for students
to learn more about themselves and how to function as leaders within our
Air Force, today and tomorrow," said Col. Gerald Goodfellow, SOC
commander and SOS commandant.
"The increased number of classes is a positive thing, because we'll have
the opportunity to impact a significantly higher number of captains in
our SOS in-residence program," said Col. Scott Yancy, SOC vice
commander.
Currently, SOS graduates about 3,600 students annually. With the change
to five weeks, more than 4,700 U.S. Air Force and international officers
and Department of Defense civilians will now graduate from the school.
In addition to the increase in throughput, the change to five weeks will
also save the Air Force $1.9 million annually.
The increase in number of classes per year from five to seven will
provide an opportunity for 100 percent of active duty captains to attend
SOS. The increase also allows a greater allocation of slots for Air
National Guard, Air Force Reserve, DoD civilians and international
officers.
The new five-week course will be an adaptation of the current
curriculum, which emphasizes five areas: leadership, communication,
warfare, the profession of arms and international security studies.
While the course reduces instructor-to-student contact time by 61 hours,
the SOS faculty rewrote a majority of the courses to ensure that the
new curriculum meets all of the learning objectives for the basic level
of primary military education.
"The learning that occurs when students interact not only with line of
the Air Force Airmen, but from the chaplain who's in the room, or the
nurse, or the [judge advocate general] officer who perhaps has a totally
different perspective ... we welcome this diversity in the classroom.
It brings different ideas and better solutions," said Yancy. "SOS
in-residence provides our captains a great opportunity to share their
areas of expertise with others, but they also gain a broader view of
what makes the United States Air Force work."
Although the classes will be shorter, the impact across the Air Force is
much greater as more captains will learn the skills necessary to lead
multi-faceted Airmen, he said.
"The course will continue to help students see the Air Force as a larger
team, with many career fields that contribute to the business of
delivering air, space and cyberspace power," Goodfellow added.
Policy changes to SOS in-resident and distance learning enrollments can
be found in Air Force Guidance Memorandum 2014-01 to Air Force
Instruction 36-2301, Developmental Education on the e-Publishing website
in the Air Force Portal.
Squadron Officer School is part of the Air University Carl A. Spaatz Center for Officer Education.
Thursday, September 11, 2014
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