Elements of Success
Author
: Susan Burkhauser, and Lawrence M. Hanser, Chaitra M. Hardison
Subject
: Elements of Success military
Publisher
: RAND Corporation
Summary :Aptitude for successful military service in the enlisted ranks includes the ability to succeed in
at least one of many military occupational specialties, career fields, or ratings and the ability
to adapt to and thrive in a military lifestyle of good order and discipline. The Department of
Defense screens military applicants for these qualities using the Armed Forces Qualification
Test from the Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery, physical and moral standards, and
educational credentials. Historically, educational credentials have served as a proxy for the
ability to adapt to a military lifestyle. Evidence that supports this use is the stark difference
in completion rates for the initial term of service between recruits who hold traditional high
school diplomas and those who hold General Educational Development certificates. However,
the last few decades have witnessed an explosion of ways to earn education credentials,
including homeschooling and distance learning. Therefore, at this juncture, it is important to
consider whether these particular education credentials (specifically those for homeschool and
distance learning) remain suitable proxies for predicting first-term attrition. This report examines
whether the current use of the education tiers better predicts first-term attrition rates than
not using education credential information at all. The results should be of interest to Congress
and Department of Defense policymakers who set policies for entrance into enlisted military
service, as well as to the military services’ recruiting services.
This research was sponsored by the Director of Accession Policy in the Office of the
Undersecretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness and conducted within the Forces and
Resources Policy Center of RAND’s National Defense Research Institute, a federally funded
research and development center sponsored by the Office of the Secretary of Defense, the Joint
Staff, the Unified Combatant Commands, the Navy, the Marine Corps, the defense agencies,
and the defense Intelligence Community. For more information on the RAND Forces and
Resources Policy Center,
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