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…so at least one of the MilCols successfully transitioned to a value-added model…Coincidentally, Royal Roads University is a great example.
…so at least one of the MilCols successfully transitioned to a value-added model…Coincidentally, Royal Roads University is a great example.
What is “traditional” Canada in your view?Every announcement like this from Ottawa is just an way to destroy or teardown traditional Canada. It's just one more Trudeau agenda item. Grow future leaders with "correct think" or just close down or replace.
I'm not saying things at RMC can not be improved or changed. Not being close to an of the issues but I'm sure there is some> But from the current government it's all about the agenda.
I don't trust at all that their plan is "improve" military leadership in anyway helpful.
The Canada that existed briefly between 1946 and 1963 I reckon....What is “traditional” Canada in your view?
There really isn't one. Canada keeps changing as all nations etc do. Institutions have to evolve as well or be destined to be swept away.What is “traditional” Canada in your view?
Maybe all we need is to recreate CFOCS and run it out of the peninsula — just like when we had Chilliwack there would be a single schoolhouse to run BMOQ training and a common introduction to CAF culture, before everyone disperses their separate ways.
Oh you mean "Upper Class Twit of the Year" contests?But what about the phony upper class accents and mannerisms?
Oh you mean "Upper Class Twit of the Year" contests?
Sure, why not. Add four weeks of extra training to BMOQ for some of that Miss Manners crap if we want to. But while the Arbour report didn’t mention that RMC produced superior table manners and a classy retro fashion sense, it did rather pointedly mention that RMC was failing at producing Anglophones who could actually function in French — supposedly one of the pillars of the institution.But what about the phony upper class accents and mannerisms?
I think it's an option along with many others that are on the table. I find it poetic really, seeing as RMCC was modeled after the original RMC in the first place, but has been Frankensteined into the grotesque beast it is now...while RMAS has essentially held its own (except for the merger of RMA and RMC into RMAS in 1947) since the 18th century.Turning RMC into Sandhurst Mark 2 seems like an attractive option, as it would eliminate the most expensive bit of RMC (the 4-year degree granting side) while appearing to not actually disband the college. But do we really need to go down the RMAS route?
I would say "yes" to doubling the training, as I have seen the product of BMOQ/BMOQ-A graduates coming through to DP1 without a basic understanding of Navigation, org structures, map symbology, or even a proper military bearing.The British Army 44 week commissioning course appears to cover the rough equivalent of BMOQ (12 weeks) and BMOQ-A (10 weeks). I’d defer judgement on whether a RMAS graduate is actually twice as well prepared for special-to-arm training as their Canadian counterpart finishing BMOQ-A in Gagetown. (And also leaving aside how this really doesn’t work for the RCAF and RCN) Do we really need to double the length of Army Officer DP 1 training at a time when we lack training capacity? And does Kingston even have the training areas and ranges to run all these BMOQ-A courses?
It worked for how many years before it was deemed surplus?Maybe all we need is to recreate CFOCS and run it out of the peninsula — just like when we had Chilliwack there would be a single schoolhouse to run BMOQ training and a common introduction to CAF culture, before everyone disperses their separate ways.
Why restrict it to officers?Sure, why not. Add four weeks of extra training to BMOQ for some of that Miss Manners crap if we want to. But while the Arbour report didn’t mention that RMC produced superior table manners and a classy retro fashion sense, it did rather pointedly mention that RMC was failing at producing Anglophones who could actually function in French — supposedly one of the pillars of the institution.
Maybe what we actually need is a hybrid of CFOCS with the Foreign Legion’s robust yet effective approach to second langauge training.
Except not everyone wants to advance that high up the chain. Also, you will find a lot of folks who are coming from very much unilingual parts of Canada (both French and English) couldn't be fucked to learn another language, because they have no intention of ever using it. It may even actively discourage recruitment in some cases.Why restrict it to officers?
Have a robust SLT baked into all initial training. It's a requirement to advance as NCMs as well as for officers.
Fair point, but it needs to be an "as requested" option during people's careers. Rather than the current opaque system of granting courses to friends, or people who don't want to move, but can't stay in their current position.Except not everyone wants to advance that high up the chain. Also, you will find a lot of folks who are coming from very much unilingual parts of Canada (both French and English) couldn't be fucked to learn another language, because they have no intention of ever using it. It may even actively discourage recruitment in some cases.
It makes sense from a quantitative mindset, but it doesn't hold enough water in my mind for the qualitative
I have zero issues with the decreed Officer Corps. I like the UK army model. I just don’t like our. RMC was created because their was not enough (or none) engineer shock in Canada. I think we’re good on that now.Except making "One CAF" work has been a 65 year effort of trying to ram 3 round pegs into the same square hole.
We tried the "common body of work" branch structure... it completely ignored that the work differs tremendously between the three elements.
We tried the common look and feel uniforms. It failed spectacularly and is still being corrected piece by piece because it was artificial and sterile in an organization that derives pride from unique identity.
We tried uniform command structures, that fell by the wayside too. We tried uniform procurement models, that is going swimmingly....
I think it's no longer just a matter of folks putting sticks in the spokes because reasons. There are some serious flaws that we have tried to just make work, but don't.
It's the same thing with RMC. We tried the MND10 recommendation from 1997 and now, here we are... 25 years later and our Officer Corps is about where it was leadership wise, but with a lot of time and money spent granting degrees.
The CAF never goes backward, only forward. It may be in a circle, but it only goes forward. If that means we go forward by correcting previous mistakes like Unification or the Degreed Officer Corps, so be it.
Not sure how that's any different to BMOQ being run in Saint-Jean now.Maybe all we need is to recreate CFOCS and run it out of the peninsula — just like when we had Chilliwack there would be a single schoolhouse to run BMOQ training and a common introduction to CAF culture, before everyone disperses their separate ways.
You do not need RMC to give those opportunities.It would be a shame if those opportunities were closed off to kids today, who are just like I was.
You do not need RMC to give those opportunities.
You could still select people for an ROTP program, pay their tuition and room and board (but no salary) at a civilian university for an approved studies program and train them (with pay) in the military arts during their summer recess. Not only would it be a lot less expensive, but the students would be exposed to a wider variety of their fellow citizens. You could demand the same level of obligatory service as well.
I don't think that had anything to do with RMC though. That is because of what you accomplished in your career, RMC or not.We were invited to speak to Corporate Leaders in Toronto about our Military Service and deliver a pitch on the value the experiences of Veterans could provide to the Corporate World.
We were talking about it afterward but we all agreed that this was a room that in another World, we really had no business being in. But we were here and we had earned our place here, not through our connections but through the merits of our achievements.