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The Sourcing Culture / Aviation's Jeopardy game
Unlike MikeD, bunk22, AMG, Hacker, and the few other AF/Navy trained guys on the site, I never went on to operational or combat units after UPT. My entire experience is wrapped up in training, and from there I went on to military R&D labs working on new concepts (aviation psychology training applications mostly). When I raised the issue here earlier of the Total Immersion training environment, there was another aspect of that which I found to be an integral part of the military culture which is rarely recognized. The Sourcing Culture, which by design sucked everybody in to it, not just the hyper-motivated pilot. A cultural norm that most of us enjoyed, but one which might be seen as almost abusive, or as an abnormal behavior, among civilians.
At UPT I found myself humbled by IPs who could not only snap out the answer to every question, they regularly spouted the AF manual #, the Chapter, and sometimes even the page and column where the information could be found. It was normal behavior, a point of pride to be good at it, and no one thought twice about challenging a speaker to cite the source of his information. In my contacts with the civilian world I noticed that habit of reciting sources to be far less common, and somewhat unwelcome unless it occurs between 2 former AF/Navy aviators. This Mil practice was even fun, like the aviation version of the TV game show Jeopardy. Those of us who studied this type of subject in R&D noted that many civilian aviators when challenged to recite their source don't always appreciate the challenge, and will give far less precise answers, or will go hunt-up the book (tomorrow) to find the answer. Reciting Sources is not as strong of a cultural norm in the civilian world as it is in the military.
I'm not sure who at UPT or in AF/Navy aviation started this unwritten Source Citation game, but the value of reciting a precise Source (or at least standing ready to recite when challenged) brought added value to the Total Immersion training environment. It had a cleansing effect. Information from pilots who stood ready to recite their Source was more heavily weighted than information from pilots who might merely be expressing an opinion or were guessing. That was a little recognized but important part of the military's Total Immersion method when I was associated with UPT. It costs nothing and it's fun, but I'm not sure where a very highly motivated civilian student could duplicate that experience, surrounding himself with that type of intensity, and thereby accelerating the pace and quality of training. A lone civilian pilot can't duplicate it at his FBO or school because it takes many like-minded pilots to play the game. The Chinese do it. As I said earlier, I'm not that well versed in the selection of civilian schools in the US, so I don't know where a civilian could duplicate that experience.
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