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Principals and teachers become hucksters for the Army
Tue, 27 Jun 2006 08:04:43 -0500
misc.education
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out_now_out_now...
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N.J. Guard Recruiters Turn to Educators
By CHRIS NEWMARKER
June 27, 2006
FORT DIX, N.J. (AP) - They ride Black Hawk helicopters, fire mock assault
Lawson English...
rifles in combat simulators and can learn what it's like to drive a Humvee.
Some are so excited they want pictures of themselves holding guns.
But these enthusiasts aren't about to join the military. They're principals,
teachers, coaches and mentors - people who New Jersey military recruiters
believe hold the key to getting more high school students interested in the
armed forces.
The strategy seems to be working. With the military sometimes struggling to
meet recruitment goals nationwide, New Jersey's National Guard has seen an
increase in enlistment in the two years since the inception of its "Educate
the Educator" program.
"If it wasn't for programs like this, educators wouldn't have an
understanding of what we do," said Lt. Col. Dennis Devery, who runs
recruitment efforts for the New Jersey Guard.
Devery credits the hands-on tours at Fort Dix, held two to three times a
week in the past year, with putting the New Jersey Guard on track to sign up
900 high school and college students this year. Before the program, the
Guard averaged about 500 high school and college enlistments, he said. The
900 recruits this year are part of a total 1,500 expected enlistments.
The program has also been tried in other states, said Jack Harrison, a
spokesman for the National Guard Bureau in Arlington, Va.
Guard officials say by educating the educators, they gain valuable allies in
recruiting students whose parents are often concerned their children will be
sent into battle.
Sgt. Steve Lawrence, a Guard recruiter, said he often points out to parents
that he's been in the Guard for six years and has yet to see combat duty -
but he knows that's possible. "It's always the first thing I hear: 'Iraq,
Iraq, Iraq,'" said Lawrence. "The parents are afraid."
Lawson English...
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Hmmmm, I wonder why he's yet to see combat duty...
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With at least 2,500 members of the U.S. military dead since the beginning of
the Iraq war, Devery acknowledged concerns about safety are legitimate.
"I understand that not everybody's going to go. But why would you take a
young person who could so benefit from joining the Guard, and not provide
them with the information?" Devery said.
During one tour in late May, a Black Hawk helicopter landed at Audubon High
School, about 7 miles southeast of Philadelphia, and flew about a dozen
educators to Fort Dix. The group checked out faux indoor combat environments
and fought an ammunition-free gun battle in a combat simulator.
Audubon High School Principal Don Borden said the tour was fun and
underscored the importance of military training and recruiting.
"What we do, we're just supportive of the kids who want to join. That's
something I'll always do as long as I'm there," Borden said.
High schools across the country generally treat military recruiters as they
would any recruiter from a college or potential employer; for example,
letting them set up tables to disseminate information to students during
school lunch periods, said Jill Cook, programs director for the Alexandria,
Va.-based American School Counselors Association.
At Pennsauken High School, near Philadelphia, guidance counselor Denise
Wrzeszczynski said some students see the military as a way to obtain an
affordable college education or develop career skills. Their parents are
often worried they'll see combat, she said.
"Sometimes they'll express that their parents are unhappy with their choice
and we discuss reasons why their parents might be unhappy," Wrzeszczynski
said.
Tom Vara, athletic director at Hopatcong High School, about 40 miles west of
Manhattan, doesn't encourage his students to join the military. He tells
them to get an education first.
"It's really patriotic, but there's another side as well. We're at war right
now, and there's a degree of risk you have to be aware of," he said.
One recent recruit from Audubon, 18-year-old Joe Werner, attended the Fort
Dix tour with the educators. He said getting on the Black Hawk with his
classmates made him feel like the "president of the United States."
Werner said he isn't worried when other students tell him he's going to end
up taking gunfire in Iraq. "I say, 'First, I'll have great stories to tell
my kids. And second, I'll be able to save my country,'" he said.
Leif Erikson...
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18-year-old!!!?
He sounds like he's a 6-year-old.
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