New Army fitness test could determine recruits' career path

Nothing like the Army taking a good idea and gaying it up with bullshit tests and stupid acronyms to turn it into a waste of time.

Just give them the APFT, with a modified scoring system that correlates with a specific MOS. Or maybe fix the APFT to fit a particular MOS (I.e. IPFT Infantry Physical Fitness Test, or CAPFT-Combat Arms, SSPFT-Service & Support, etc).

The APFT is a poor measurement tool, or more specifically lacking, but to require recruits to pass it before heading to BCT/AIT/OSUT, would be pretty simple and effective at weeding out fat bodies and non-hackers.

But if the goal is to specifically place people in specific jobs, by testing them to meet that jobs physical requirement. It would only make sense to have an actual test specific to that said job, and not a one test fits all, with a mathematical equation to say "yay or nay".

Based on the video, this would be pre-basic training, probably part of the MEPS process.
 
Since any soldier should be physically and mentally prepared to face the rigors of fighting, moving and communicating in a combat zone, I'm partial to readiness along the lines of the Marine Corps' 'Every Marine is a rifleman" philosophy. :thumbsup:

Perhaps this is part of a slow movement away from such a standard in the Army.
 
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If you ruck while wearing knee pads, you should be deep throating someone.

Also, if you're a two star appearing in an Army film, wear a fucking uniform that fits correctly. This is why all should be assigned a SGM, who looked like a professional in the video.

That's the best Marine Corps recruiting video I've ever seen.
 
Why?
Doesn't SF/CAG/Rangers have a different fitness standard that determines their jobs?
Could you expound on that for the unwashed masses?

This appears to be a way to justify a difference in physical capabilities between men and women performing the same job, by 'scientifically' norming gender standards for positions held.
 
This appears to be a way to justify a difference in physical capabilities between men and women performing the same job, by 'scientifically' norming gender standards for positions held.
I could not agree more. This honestly just seems like an over complicated way to determine some level of fitness that justifies the women in combat arms movement. I feel like soon enough the days of push-ups, sit ups and pull-ups will be long gone.

These kinda tests remind me a lot of the "suposed" new standards AFSOC will be implementing for the Battlefield airmen careers...image.jpeg
 
The new BA test is nothing like this @Jay_Pew. First of all, it's not adjusted for age, gender, or anything else. Secondly, it is not an easy test. I've run it and it's no joke. Women stood a far higher chance of making it into the BA AFSCs before this test.
 
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