American Military Heritage
American Military Heritage
American Military Heritage
American Military Heritage
American Military Heritage
Unit readiness training is typically addressed through CO2 training elements such as Leadership Engagement and Accountability, Communication and Feedback, and Unit Training and Education. These elements help establish a positive command climate by emphasizing leadership involvement, clear communication, and effective training to ensure unit readiness.
Physical readiness training provides a physical component to tactical and technical competence.
logistics readiness is just one of the 5 key measurement areas of operational readiness. The other 4 areas are: personnel readiness, training readiness, equipment maintenance readiness and life support system readiness
Training.
Readiness Goals
A NG Training NCO Serves as a Unit Training NCO. Prepares unit training schedules. Coordinates training aids and resources as directed by Readiness NCO and Company Commander. Assists Readiness NCO in documenting training and individual Soldier readiness data. Assists as needed with administrative management of the unit on a daily basis. Reviews, inputs, coordinate and manage individual Soldier school applications. Assists the unit commander in coordinating, resourcing, documenting and assessing Soldier training and unit training and readiness. Responsible for insuring successful accomplishment of tasks which support the units training programs. Drafts training schedules for approval. Maintains the unit training library. Establish and maintain training aids support center account. Prepare and submit requests for training areas, vehicles, equipment, ranges and other training needs. Advises the Commander on mobilization and readiness requirements. Prepares and disseminates unit OPLANS/OPORDS. PERFORMS OTHER DUTIES AS ASSIGNED.
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