combat_medic said:
3. Yes, a greater percentage of women fail in the combat arms. However, more than 50% of men fail JTF selection, or Pathfinder courses, or even Basic Para can have a 50%+ failure rate. Since we're spending such an inordinate amount of money training these men who have a greater chance at failure than at success, should we not also ban them from competing? I can't tell you how many recruiting posters I've seen with men on them. We keep trying to recruit these men, and yet, every course I've been on I've seen men dropping off. Why are we targetting this group when so many have shown they can't hack it?
It's a ridiculous argument.
The courses, elite or otherwise, have to be staffed and we have two options (IE two genders) to pick from (the debate is whether it should be both). Both have segments that fail and pass, it's just that one has a disproportionately (relative to the other gender) large portion failling consistently, even on courses that are nowhere near the "elite" level. Further, the retention rates in the CA trades for this group are so incredibly low that the training received even by those that pass, and all the associated costs, are virtually wasted when they could have been trained for a trade they may actually stay in.
The question is whether the 1% that actually stay in the trades is worth the cost of training/equipping/etc. the 99% that don't and the others who didn't get far enough to even be employed in the trade. I'm not saying men's performance is superb and irreproachable, I'm just saying that when one assumes staffing has to take place and that we have two groups showing markedly different performance rates (one so much so that the virtual entirety of the employable group can be assumed "lost" after the initial engagement) to choose from, the logical thing to do is spend the money on the option that yields the most efficient output.
Or things could be changed to ensure more women pass the courses - it seems many feel higher standards would have a good effect in reducing the failure rates and I'm sure they're probably right. I don't see that doing anything for retention rates, though. To pass off the low female combat arms retention rates as "male piggishness" is a bit of a copout. As Infanteer pointed out, the very nature of the institution and trade seems a more likely culprit but whether that can be altered sufficiently (or should be) to boost retention rates to that of males (or better) without compromising the effectiveness of the trade/institution is another debate, I guess, and one I'd be interested in hearing about from the members with experience in the combat arms.
Britney Spears said:
Because the entry tests are suppose to screen out false positives. It may very well be that 80% of men who apply can hack the training and oly 10% of women who apply can, or maybe only 8% of men and 1% of women, if the entry tests were realistic almost all the recruits chosen should still pass. It has nothing to do with how difficult the training is in absoluite terms.
Lets look at your viewpoint on costs without touching the gender issue. I agree, and I think that ANY course of training that fails more than 10% of candidates is a waste. What is the point of running a course where half the course won't pass? Those who didn't pass should never have been on the course to begin with, it's a sign that your entry standards are inadequate.
Do you think the CF should have trade-specific entry standards for the combat arms? I don't think it's a bad idea, although (not from experience really) I think you'd lose alot of people who were OK by the existing standards but wouldn't have passed the trade standard at the time, got in sufficient shape while in preliminary training, and passed muster once the trade standards came around. Higher standards wouldn't raise the number of women in the combat arms or their retention rate (I think) but it would most assuredly increase the efficiency rate. Combine that with higher recruiting numbers and I think you could really improve the combat arms while lowering costs. Another problem, though, is whether the costs incurred by separate facilities, etc. are worth the extremely low numbers of women joining, and staying, in the combat arms. I have no idea what these costs are like - maybe someone knows.
From the little bit of the experience I've had so far (very little, mind you), I saw people (men
and women) in IAP who wouldn't have passed the application physical. One girl (and no, I'm not picking her just because she's a girl - the gender in this case is irrelevant to the point - [and she
was a "girl" - only 16 or 17]) but she'd drop out of the morning PT runs after 200 or 300 metres, had major issues with push-ups, failed the shuttle run, and started crying/over-exherting during double-time
drill lessons. She was released, of course, but the money spent up to that point was wasted. Another woman couldn't do ONE push-up. I'm not joking - not ONE proper push-up. How she passed the recruiting test is beyond me. She was re-tested and failed the second time, but that was due to PSP error in the testing (and so she was recoursed to this summer, thankfully). Another guy failed his grip test on course (must have failed it at the civi PT test too), was given a re-test date a few weeks later, failed it again, and was released. There seems to be an issue with the civilian contractors that are conducting the applicant PF tests, or whoever else is used to do the tests. I think clearing this up would also help with efficiency issues - especially on prelim courses.
[quote author=bojangles]Why is there no thread that says "Men in the Army? in the Combat Arms? in the Infantry?[/quote]
Because there's nothing to discuss about it vis a vis its appropriateness. I suppose we could debate whether our combat arms should be all-female but considering their success and retention rates, it's a virtual non-starter. It's tantamount to asking "Should we have women in midwifery". Men have been in the infantry since there was an infantry to be in, women in the infantry and combat arms in general is a recent development (in Canada) which still generates several concerns to be discussed - most especially regarding success, retention, etc. I'm not necessarily against women in the combat arms, I just think that it needs to be examined more from a practical and cost-benefit viewpoint than a politically or ideologically motivated one. There's no question that there are women out there that can do the job and do it as well or better than many males, the question (for me) is whether their inclusion is practical, both in terms of cost and in terms of the institutional characteristics. As I said - I'm torn on this one because my politics/beliefs say "yes" but practicality and cost/benefit say "not necessarily".