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Army’s Future Soldier Prep Course may expand to Benning

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Army Brig. Gen. Patrick R. Michaelis, Fort Jackson Commanding General, leads media representatives through a tour of the Army Future Soldier Preparatory Course Pilot Program on August 18, 2022, Fort Jackson, South Carolina. (Pfc. Ana-Grace Catoe/Army)

As the service struggles to meet its recruiting quotas at a rate not recently seen in the all-volunteer force era, the Army is poised to expand the pre-boot camp course it established to help young Americans improve their fitness and test scores in order to sign permanent contracts.

The Army launched the Future Soldier Preparatory Course at Fort Jackson, South Carolina, in August. An Army Times reporter embedded there for two days to document the service’s efforts to help hopeful troops with excess body fat or low test scores make enough progress to enlist.

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Army Secretary Christine Wormuth said in November that the course has seen 93% of students in the academic track improve their Armed Forces Qualification Test scores enough to move on to basic training, and between 83 and 85% of applicants there in the fitness course have successfully lost enough body fat to sign permanent contracts.

“I think we’re going to expand that program to other locations,” said Wormuth in an interview at the Center for a New American Security, Washington, D.C.-based think tank. “We have more young Americans who want to do it than we can accommodate right now at Fort Jackson.”

She also suggested a virtual option for the academic track, but it’s not clear if Army planners are preparing one.

An Army official speaking on background indicated that the academic track is likely to expand first to Fort Benning, Georgia, and officials at Fort Jackson will also increase capacity there.

Davis Winkie is a senior reporter covering the Army, specializing in accountability reporting, personnel issues and military justice. He joined Military Times in 2020. Davis studied history at Vanderbilt University and UNC-Chapel Hill, writing a master’s thesis about how the Cold War-era Defense Department influenced Hollywood’s WWII movies.

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