When I was a Platoon Commander in St. Jean, I would ask nicely if any one had wisely decided to save me valuable time by pre-writing their biography. Some would smile and say "Yes, Warrant!" I would then collect them and make them all do it again by hand. Why?
1. Pressure - you learn a lot about someone when they write under pressure.
2. No time to edit. Amazing. I told another instructor that if we could take a 60 man platoons of autobiographies and show the people of Canada what some of their youth went through - the reality of life - we would have a bestseller. You know the first half hour of "Full Metal Jacket"? That is NOTHING compared to what some kids have gone through in their home lives before joining the Army.
3. Penmanship, Grammer, general Literacy. Indicators of future coping problems due to FAS/ADD/ADHD/sociopathic issues, etc. The recruits of today are tomorrows RSMs. We are already a semi-literate Army, we can't afford to get worse. At some point, It's just bad economics to throw good money after bad. We have to cut our losses. Sorry.
4. I would stay that night until ALL the bios were written, then I would take them home and read them. I would re-read about a fifth, then re-reread about one or two more. I would get to sleep about three or four, but, it had to be done.
Tom