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CAC-T leading the way in trainingCSA announces Project Warrior Critical to effectively managing this transition described in the Army Training Strategy is the development of agile and adaptive leaders. These leaders must be agile enough to rapidly adjust from conducting stability operations in a counterinsurgency one day to conducting offensive operations against a large conventional force the next. They must be adaptive to a broad spectrum of operational environmental conditions, with the professional acumen to recognize both opportunities and risks. One of the programs I am restarting to build these agile, adaptive leaders is Project Warrior. Click here to read the rest of the announcement. ATN becomes more user friendly FORT LEAVENWORTH, Kan. -- New features on the Army Training Network (ATN) web site make it easier for Soldiers and Commanders to access vital training materials. "Changes to the homepage and the site's content have streamlined access and sped up information delivery," said Jimmy Davis, ATN Team Lead at the Combined Arms Center - Training's Training Management Directorate (TMD). "We know Soldiers need information now, not tomorrow." TMD is responsible for ATN, the Army's one-stop shop and information source for training. Its web site is at: https://atn.army.mil/. Click here to read the rest of the article. Click here to see video about improvements to ATN. Page hits on the Combine Arms Training Strategies (CATS) viewer are up substantially. Recently, they rose to 25,000 views a month compared with 8,000 views last April. Interest in CATS increased with the publication of new training doctrine. Training teams also visited posts to explain the benefits of CATS and other Army Training Network digital resources. CATS offers task-based, event-driven training strategies that assist commanders in planning and executing training events. Click here to learn more about CATS. Officers at the Command and General Staff College have access at their fingertips to course materials, thanks to a new software program and dot-com address that may be accessed using their personal mobile devices. Army making distributed learning more accessible Army learning institutions are making course materials that were once hidden behind online firewalls more accessible, on students’ mobile devices and in their homes. A one-year Army pilot program is aimed at helping students learn by unshackling course materials from the service’s increasingly tougher cybersecurity measures — which are fine for operational computer networks but perhaps overkill for Army schools, say officials close to the effort. Click here to read the rest of the Army Times article. Last Reviewed:May 14, 2013 |
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