Skill Qualification and Turbulence in the Army National Guard and Army Reserve.

Abstract

Improving the personnel and training readiness of Selected Reserve units requires, among other things, the identification of problems in meeting readiness goals, the causes of these problems, and likely solutions. This report addresses the issue of individual job training in the Army National Guard and Army Reserve. For several reasons, a significant proportion of reservists in units are not even minimally qualified in their assigned jobs. These reasons include the large share of prior-service personnel requiring retraining, the large number of reservists who change units and jobs over their career, and forces retraining required when the force structure changes or is modernized. This research has established a job tracking system for reservists and used that system to measure job qualification levels in different units and jobs. It has also measured the frequency of assigned job changes and provided evidence on the causes of usch changes. Finally, it has measured average retraining times for reservists changing jobs

Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Jan 01, 1994
Accession Number
ADA282353

Entities

People

  • David W. Grissmer
  • Richard E. Buddin

Organizations

  • RAND Corporation

Tags

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Education
  • Force Structure
  • Frequency
  • Identification
  • Job Training
  • Military Training
  • National Guard
  • Qualifications
  • Retraining
  • Students
  • Trainees
  • Training
  • Turbulence

Readers

  • Military Mobilization and Reserve Forces Studies.
  • Organizational Psychology.