![]() I agree that all such portraits, pictures, photographs, video and audio recordings, and any reproductions thereof, and all plates, negatives, recording tape, and digital files are and shall remain the property of the Foundation. I waive the right to approve the final product. I also understand and agree that I may be identified by name and/or title in printed, Internet, or broadcast information that might accompany the photographs and/or video recordings of me. I understand and agree that such photographs and/or video recordings of me may be placed on the Internet. Chamber of Commerce Foundation (the “Foundation”) and any co-host organization(s) (“Co-Host”) the irrevocable right and permission to use photographs and/or video recordings of me on Foundation or other websites and in publications, promotional flyers, educational materials, derivative works, or for any other similar purpose without compensation to me. I understand that my registration information, including but not limited to rank, service branch, and unit may be shared with partners of Hiring Our Heroes or the base affiliated with the event.īy registering for this program, I hereby grant the U.S. I worked with few who I'd say were really good.I authorize Hiring Our Heroes, its partners, and, if applicable, the related military installation to contact me regarding the details of the program or regarding my job search. Their work really is hard if you don't have great eyesight, great spatial recognition, and a degree of intuition when it comes to blurry, oblique-angle photos and calculating shadows to determine dimensions. But I will say this if you can read military maps, draw near perfect symbology (if they even use paper maps, symbology stencils - called templates, acetate, military protractor, and markers anymore) and you can follow very simple directions, then you'll do fine as a 35F. It's been four years since I worked at the school and much has changed. After I was medically retired, I ran the simulation software for most of the capstone courses at the school, (multiple courses, both Officer and Enlisted.) I'm honestly not sure if the course difficulty is worth discussing anymore. ![]() The 97 version of the course was WAY harder and the skills of the more recent graduates I served with showed me that the course has gotten easier. I went through the course twice in 1997 and once in 2002, when it was 96B, not 35F. If you go to 35F AIT as reclass it will be a lot more chill for you than it is for the IET recruits for sure too. So it might be better - but I didn't get to do any kind of intel training that 4 1/2 years. The Intelligence Analyst understands the threat and employs all the intelligence disciplines to anticipate the enemy’s next move. This was before the BEBs which now have MICOs in them. For me, I'm doing a very niche all-source job at a theater command. You can do 10 different things at 10 different units, it's a misconception that anyone can tell you what the day-to-day is for a 35F out of AIT. I will say in my first unit which was an EN BN, that's where I did the most "Army" stuff - but they never let us go do any intel training anywhere. All-sources gets clowned on by the single-source mos because it isnt as technical or sexy, but it is absolutely necessary as a job. If you're in S2, you're doing a lot of personnel security (security clearances), physical security, things like that. If you get lucky enough, you may get to go somewhere and do some actual analysis. You will be doing a lot of products though - mostly Power Point. I was watch NCOIC and then indications and warning branch NCOIC.Īs a 35F, you can be in any unit. Then I went to Strategic Command on a compassionate reassignment. I was BN SARC as additional duty before that. Then I went to Ft Riley and was in a MICO, then BDE S2, then BDE SARC. They tried to recruit us 35Fs to be cyber when creating the cyber MOS. It was building when I was there those 2 years and I was a targeting analyst. Then I went to Cyber Command before it actually stood up so I don't know what it's like now. If you're a 35F you're likely to end up in an S2 at some point. ![]() Since you will be considered a MOS-T AIT would be even. Our unique MOS credentialing program provides service members the opportunity to earn college credit toward a degree through their military training. I came in when we were still 96Bs - and then turned to 35F. 35F) I recently went through AIT in Fort Huachuca from MAY 2020 - NOV 2020 it wasnt difficult at all. It wasn't hard when I went in 2004-05 and, from what I heard, definitely not hard now.
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