Military Review English Edition July-August 2015 | Page 13

DEVELOPMENT AND MANAGEMENT (Photo by Staff Sgt. Mikki L. Sprenkle, CSA photographer) Army Chief of Staff Gen. Raymond Odierno provides feedback 26 February 2015 during the 2015 Captain's Solarium discussion at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. retains, challenges, and inspires its best, brightest, and most battle-tested young officers and NCOs to lead the service in the future, and we must complement these efforts by encouraging and supporting our leaders to continuously self-develop. The Institutional Domain The institutional domain represents a powerful element of the Army’s leader development program. It is where we set expectations and a foundation of understanding for our leaders. As stewards of the profession, we must always strive to improve and adapt, and we are instituting several new initiatives to support this endeavor. Our strategy begins with precommissioning for officers and continues all the way through the general officer ranks. Similarly, our NCO Corps develops leaders from initial entry training and intermediate NCO development through the Sergeants Major Academy. We are evolving and transforming this process as we prepare for a more complex future. One of the ways we are doing this is by launching The Army University, which will apply rigorous academic standards and MILITARY REVIEW  July-August 2015 credentials to our existing professional military education programs. While The Army University will have many impacts on the educational enterprise, one of its most important features is to provide full college-level accreditation to many existing Army education programs and to record those credits in a universal transcript for every soldier and civilian. This will allow Army professionals to pursue their educational goals while they serve the Nation and give them full credit for the work they have already completed. The Army University is the next logical step in the continued professionalization of the Army that began with the creation of the all-volunteer force in 1973. This effort organizes all U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command’s (TRADOC’s) existing educational programs into a single university structure to promote greater academic rigor, improve internal integration, and enhance external collaboration with many of the Nation’s best universities and colleges. The Army University expands the ability of soldiers to integrate their military and civilian education and to receive valid academic credit for their educational investment. 11