- Jun 23, 2001
 
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Okay, the US Air Force conducts its PT test in the following manner. There is a timed 1.5mi run worth a possible of 50pts, a waist tape worth a possible 30 pts, and 1 min each of pushups and sit-ups worth a possible 10 points each. Based on how fast you run, how small your waist is, and how many pushups and situps you complete, you are awarded points. Minimum passing score is a 75 out of 100. An individuals height and weight can also effect their total score in some situations, but the majority of people its a checkbox test. Its not that difficult of system. 
The Air Force has had this style of testing now for about 3 years or so. It replaced the absolutely worthless, and much ridiculed 'ERGO' bike test.
When an individual fails to achieve a 75, they are placed on a mandatory 5 day a week monitored PT program. Myself and a few others run the program and alternate actually running the PT sessions on a weekly basis.
Earlier this week, we did some last man up runs. I split them into two groups, a fast and a slow group. We did this for 4 laps around a 1/4 mile track, so about 1mi total. The fast group posted a 10:40 minute mile while the slow group posted a 11:45 minute mile. Thinking this was just because individuals were being forced to slow down to the slowest person in the group, I didn't think much of it.
Yesterday, we did a simple mile run warm-up before pressing on with the rest of our workout. The fastest mile time, aside from myself, was 11:02.
WTF? Seriously, these people are active duty military, thats absolutely pathetic. And only about 1/4 people on this program under E4 or lower. The bulk of them are TSgts and MSgts.
Some of these people have been on this program for almost 2 years, and leadership in taking disciplinary action has been slow coming. There is a stigma of sorts, supervision believes that they are destroying someone's career by taking a stripe or booting them out of the service for a PT failure. But, who really is responsible for failing their PT test? The member or the people above him? Bare in mind, that even the people who score above that 75 mark are afforded time to do PT, either during duty time or on their own. The people who score below that 75 mark are placed on a mandatory 5 day per week program, as I said before, so they are essentially forced to work out.
Some of these people have actually handed me the line "I am physically incapable of running 1.5 miles without stopping to walk." Thats bullsh!t. You've been forced to work out for months now, if not years in some cases, and you still can't run a mile and a half, in comfy shoes and clothing, no less? Lord help you when you're deployed somewhere wearing full combat gear and being shot at.
I was chewed out yesterday by a former MSgt, now a TSgt, because I was the one who failed him on his last PT test. He lost a stripe over repeat failures. He ran his 1.5mi run in about 15:50. And I could only count about half his situps because he was doing them improperly, which I informed of during the test repeated. And he only did about 20 good pushups because he wasn't coming up all the way on the pushup. There was even another, certified tester there during the test who verified all the numbers gained.
Somehow its my fault that he lost a stripe and a several hundred dollars per month. :disgust:
No cliffs, sorry, need to go work these people out again this morning too.
			
			The Air Force has had this style of testing now for about 3 years or so. It replaced the absolutely worthless, and much ridiculed 'ERGO' bike test.
When an individual fails to achieve a 75, they are placed on a mandatory 5 day a week monitored PT program. Myself and a few others run the program and alternate actually running the PT sessions on a weekly basis.
Earlier this week, we did some last man up runs. I split them into two groups, a fast and a slow group. We did this for 4 laps around a 1/4 mile track, so about 1mi total. The fast group posted a 10:40 minute mile while the slow group posted a 11:45 minute mile. Thinking this was just because individuals were being forced to slow down to the slowest person in the group, I didn't think much of it.
Yesterday, we did a simple mile run warm-up before pressing on with the rest of our workout. The fastest mile time, aside from myself, was 11:02.
WTF? Seriously, these people are active duty military, thats absolutely pathetic. And only about 1/4 people on this program under E4 or lower. The bulk of them are TSgts and MSgts.
Some of these people have been on this program for almost 2 years, and leadership in taking disciplinary action has been slow coming. There is a stigma of sorts, supervision believes that they are destroying someone's career by taking a stripe or booting them out of the service for a PT failure. But, who really is responsible for failing their PT test? The member or the people above him? Bare in mind, that even the people who score above that 75 mark are afforded time to do PT, either during duty time or on their own. The people who score below that 75 mark are placed on a mandatory 5 day per week program, as I said before, so they are essentially forced to work out.
Some of these people have actually handed me the line "I am physically incapable of running 1.5 miles without stopping to walk." Thats bullsh!t. You've been forced to work out for months now, if not years in some cases, and you still can't run a mile and a half, in comfy shoes and clothing, no less? Lord help you when you're deployed somewhere wearing full combat gear and being shot at.
I was chewed out yesterday by a former MSgt, now a TSgt, because I was the one who failed him on his last PT test. He lost a stripe over repeat failures. He ran his 1.5mi run in about 15:50. And I could only count about half his situps because he was doing them improperly, which I informed of during the test repeated. And he only did about 20 good pushups because he wasn't coming up all the way on the pushup. There was even another, certified tester there during the test who verified all the numbers gained.
Somehow its my fault that he lost a stripe and a several hundred dollars per month. :disgust:
No cliffs, sorry, need to go work these people out again this morning too.
				
		
			