Showing posts with label sergeant. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sergeant. Show all posts

Thursday, January 3, 2013

US Army Leader Defined

Army Leadership

1-1. An enduring expression for Army leadership has been BE-KNOW-DO. Army leadership begins with what the leader must BE—the values and attributes that shape character. It may be helpful to think of these as internal and defining qualities possessed all the time. As defining qualities, they make up the identity of the leader.

1-2. Who is an Army leader? An Army leader is anyone who by virtue of assumed role or assigned responsibility inspires and influences people to accomplish organizational goals. Army leaders motivate people both inside and outside the chain of command to pursue actions, focus thinking, and shape decisions for the greater good of the organization.

  1-3. Values and attributes are the same for all leaders, regardless of position, although refined through experience and assumption of positions of greater responsibility. For example, a sergeant major with combat experience may have a deeper understanding of selfless service and personal courage than a new Soldier.
 
1-4. The knowledge that leaders should use in leadership is what Soldiers and Army civilians KNOW. Leadership requires knowing about tactics, technical systems, organizations, management of resources, and the tendencies and needs of people. Knowledge shapes a leader’s identity and is reinforced by a leader’s actions.

 1-5. While character and knowledge are necessary, by themselves they are not enough. Leaders cannot be effective until they apply what they know. What leaders DO, or leader actions, is directly related to the influence they have on others and what is done. As with knowledge, leaders will learn more about leadership as they serve in different positions.

Monday, December 12, 2011

The Oath

Upon taking the oath to become an Army leader, Soldiers, and Army civilians enter into a sacred agreement
with the Nation and their subordinates. The men and women of the Army are capable of extraordinary feats of
courage and sacrifice as they have proven on countless battlefields from the Revolutionary War to the War on
Terrorism. These Soldiers and Army civilians display great patience, persistence, and tremendous loyalty as
they perform their duty to the Nation in thousands of orderly rooms, offices, motor pools, and training areas
around the world, no matter how difficult, tedious, or risky the task. In return, they deserve competent,
professional, and ethical leadership. They expect their Army leaders to respect them as valued members of
effective and cohesive organizations and to embrace the essence of leadership.

Sunday, October 23, 2011

Respect

Treat people as they should be treated.
The discipline which makes the soldiers of a free country reliable in battle is not to be
gained by harsh or tyrannical treatment. On the contrary, such treatment is far more
likely to destroy than to make an army. It is possible to impart instruction and to give
commands in such manner and such a tone of voice to inspire in the soldier no feeling
but an intense desire to obey, while the opposite manner and tone of voice cannot fail to
excite strong resentment and a desire to disobey. The one mode or the other of dealing
with subordinates springs from a corresponding spirit in the breast of the commander.
He who feels the respect which is due to others cannot fail to inspire in them regard for
himself, while he who feels, and hence manifests, disrespect toward others, especially his
inferiors, cannot fail to inspire hatred against himself.
Major General John M. Schofield
Address to the United States Corps of Cadets, 11 August 1879

Respect for the individual is the basis for the rule of law—the very essence of what the Nation stands
for. In the Army, respect means treating others as they should be treated. This value reiterates that people
are the most precious resource and that one is bound to treat others with dignity and respect.

Over the course of history, America has become more culturally diverse, requiring Army leaders to
deal with people from a wider range of ethnic, racial, and religious backgrounds. An Army leader should
prevent misunderstandings arising from cultural differences. Actively seeking to learn about people whose
culture is different can help to do this. Being sensitive to other cultures will aid in mentoring, coaching,
and counseling subordinates. This demonstrates respect when seeking to understand their background, see
things from their perspective, and appreciate what is important to them.

Army leaders should consistently foster a climate in which everyone is treated with dignity and
respect, regardless of race, gender, creed, or religious belief. Fostering a balanced and dignified work
climate begins with a leader’s personal example. How a leader lives the Army Values shows subordinates
how they should behave. Teaching values is one of a leader’s most important responsibilities. It helps
create a common understanding of the Army Values and expected standards.

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Duty

Fulfill your obligations.

I go anywhere in the world they tell me to go, any time they tell me to, to fight anybody
they want me to fight. I move my family anywhere they tell me to move, on a day’s notice,
and live in whatever quarters they assign me. I work whenever they tell me to work….
And I like it.
James H. Webb
Former U.S. Marine and Secretary of the Navy (1987-1988)

Duty extends beyond everything required by law, regulation, and orders. Professionals work not just
to meet the minimum standard, but consistently strive to do their very best. Army leaders commit to
excellence in all aspects of their professional responsibility.

Part of fulfilling duty is to exercise initiative—anticipating what needs to be done before being told
what to do. Army leaders exercise initiative when they fulfill the purpose, not merely the letter, of the tasks
they have been assigned and the orders they have received. The task is not complete until the intended
outcome is achieved. When a platoon sergeant tells a squad leader to inspect weapons, the squad leader
only fulfills a minimum obligation when checking weapons. If the squad leader finds weapons that are not
clean or serviced, a sense of duty alerts the leader to go beyond the platoon sergeant’s instructions. To
fulfill that duty, squad leaders must correct the problem and ensure that all the unit’s weapons are up to
standard. When leaders take initiative, they also take full responsibility for their actions and those of their
subordinates. Conscientiousness is a human trait where duty is internalized. Conscientiousness means
having a high sense of responsibility for personal contributions to the Army, demonstrated through
dedicated effort, organization, thoroughness, reliability, and practicality. Conscientiousness consistently
alerts the leader to do what is right—even when tired or demoralized.

In rare cases, a leader’s sense of duty also has to detect and prevent an illegal order. Duty requires
refusal to obey it—leaders have no choice but to do what is ethically and legally right

Friday, October 7, 2011

Army Leadership-Formal and Informal

LEADER TEAMS
Leaders at all levels recognize the Army is a team as well as a team of teams. These teams interact as
numerous functional units, designed to perform necessary tasks and missions that in unison produce the
collective effort of all Army components. Everyone belongs to a team, serving as either leader or
responsible subordinate. For these teams to function at their best, leaders and followers must develop
mutual trust and respect, recognize existing talents, and willingly contribute talents and abilities for the
common good of the organization. Leadership within the teams that make up Army usually comes in two
forms:
  •  Legitimate (formal).
  •  Influential (informal).
FORMAL LEADERSHIP
Legitimate or formal leadership is granted to individuals by virtue of assignment to positions of
responsibility and is a function of rank and experience. The positions themselves are based on the leader’s
level of job experience and training. One selection process used for the assignment of legitimate authority
is the command selection board. Similar to a promotion board, the selection board uses past performance
and potential for success to select officers for command positions. NCOs assume legitimate authority when
assigned as a platoon sergeant, first sergeant, or command sergeant major. These positions bring with them
the duty to recommend disciplinary actions and advancement or promotion.
 
The Uniform Code of Military Justice supports military leaders in positions of legitimate authority.
Regardless of the quality of leadership exhibited by organizationally appointed leaders, they possess the
legal right to impose their will on subordinates, using legal orders and directives.
 
INFORMAL LEADERSHIP
Informal leadership can be found throughout organizations, and while it can play an important role
in mission accomplishment, it should never undermine legitimate authority. All members of the Army
could find themselves in a position to serve as a leader at any time. Informal leadership is not based on any
particular rank or position in the organizational hierarchy. It can arise from the knowledge gained from
experience and sometimes requires initiative on the part of the individual to assume responsibility not
designated to his position. Therefore, even the most junior member may be able to influence the decision of
the highest organizational authority. As the final decision maker, the formal leader is ultimately responsible
for legitimizing an informal leader’s course of action.

Sunday, October 2, 2011

How to Prepare and Eat Fowl-Ranger Handbook

Fowl. Your first step after killing a fowl for eating or preserving is to pluck its feathers. If plucking is impractical, you can skin the fowl. Keep in mind, however, that a fowl cooked with the skin on retains more food value. Waterfowl are easier to pluck while dry, but other fowl are easier to pluck after scalding. After you pluck the fowl--
  • Cut off its neck close to the body.
  • Cut an incision in the abdominal cavity and clean out the insides. Save the neck, liver, and heart for stew. Thoroughly clean and dry the entrails to use for cordage.
  • Wash out the abdominal cavity with fresh clean water. You can boil fowl or cook it on a spit over a fire. You should boil scavenger birds such as vultures and buzzards for at least 20 minutes to kill any parasites. Use the feathers from fowl for insulating your shoes clothing, or bedding. You can also use feathers for fish lures.

Monday, September 12, 2011

What is an NCO-Leadership lessons

NONCOMMISSIONED OFFICERS - Excerpt from Army Leadership

NCOs conduct the daily operations of the Army. The NCO corps has adopted a vision that defines
their role within the Army organization.

The Army relies on NCOs who are capable of executing complex tactical operations, making intentdriven
decisions, and who can operate in joint, interagency, and multinational scenarios. They must take
the information provided by their leaders and pass it on to their subordinates. Soldiers look to their NCOs
for solutions, guidance, and inspiration. Soldiers can relate to NCOs since NCOs are promoted from the
junior enlisted ranks. They expect them to be the buffer, filtering information from the commissioned
officers and providing them with the day-to-day guidance to get the job done. To answer the challenges of
the contemporary operating environment, NCOs must train their Soldiers to cope, prepare, and perform no
matter what the situation. In short, the Army NCO of today is a warrior-leader of strong character,
comfortable in every role outlined in the NCO Corps’ vision.

NCO leaders are responsible for setting and maintaining high-quality standards and discipline. They
are the standard-bearers. Throughout history, flags have served as rallying points for Soldiers, and because
of their symbolic importance, NCOs are entrusted with maintaining them. In a similar sense, NCOs are also
accountable for caring for Soldiers and setting the example for them.

NCOs live and work every day with Soldiers. The first people that new recruits encounter when
joining the Army are NCOs. NCOs process Soldiers for enlistment, teach basic Soldier skills, and
demonstrate how to respect superior officers. Even after transition from civilian to Soldier is complete, the
NCO is the key direct leader and trainer for individual, team, and crew skills at the unit level.

While preparing Soldiers for the mission ahead, the NCO trainer always stresses the basics of
fieldcraft and physical hardening. He knows that the tools provided by technology will not reduce the need
for mentally and physically fit Soldiers. Soldiers will continue to carry heavy loads, convoy for hours or
days, and clear terrorists from caves and urban strongholds. With sleep often neglected in fast-paced
operations, tactical success and failure is a direct correlation to the Soldiers’ level of physical fitness.
Taking care of Soldiers means making sure they are prepared for whatever challenge lies ahead.

NCOs have other roles as trainers, mentors, communicators, and advisors. When junior officers first
serve in the Army, their NCO helps to train and mold them. When lieutenants make mistakes, seasoned
NCOs can step in and guide the young officers back on track. Doing so ensures mission accomplishment
and Soldier safety while forming professional and personal bonds with the officers based on mutual trust
and common goals. “Watching each other’s back” is a fundamental step in team building and cohesion.

For battalion commanders, the command sergeant major is an important source of knowledge and
discipline for all enlisted matters within the battalion. At the highest level, the Sergeant Major of the Army
is the Army Chief of Staff’s personal advisor, recommending policy to support Soldiers and constantly
meeting with and checking Soldiers throughout the Army.