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2012 AETC Symposium
Retired Army Maj. Gen. Joe Robles, the USAA chief executive officer, delivers a keynote speech during a luncheon Jan. 13, 2012, at the 2012 Air Education and Training Command Symposium in San Antonio. The event offered a "big picture" perspective of the AETC enterprise to nearly 4,000 participants. (U.S. Air Force photo/Don Lindsey)
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 GENERAL EDWARD A. RICE JR.
AETC Airmen share lessons, vision at 2012 Symposium

Posted 1/19/2012   Updated 1/20/2012 Email story   Print story

    


by Staff Sgt. Clinton Atkins
Air Education and Training Command Public Affairs


1/19/2012 - SAN ANTONIO (AFNS) -- Thousands of Airmen from across Air Education and Training Command attended the 2012 AETC Symposium here Jan. 12-13 to learn about world-leading capabilities and technologies for educating, training, recruiting and innovating.

More than 120 vendor booths, 70 seminars and panels, and a number of keynote speakers set the stage for a unique learning environment.

"It is really a great opportunity for all of our Airmen who are able to participate to learn more about the entire AETC enterprise," said Gen. Edward A. Rice Jr., the AETC commander. "I know everyone is an expert in their particular piece, but I want them to learn about what others do."

Rice said the nearly 4,000 AETC Airmen who attended will benefit from their experiences at the symposium, but the reason for them participating goes far beyond their individual experiences.

"I also expect them to go back to their units, as I charged them (on the first day) in my opening comments, to take what they learn here and build upon it," the general said. "So I expect everybody in AETC to learn from it, gain from it, benefit from it in one way or another."

The information and seminars offered at the symposium, Rice said, were designed to educate Airmen about the AETC enterprise as a whole, which will allow the career fields within the command to work more seamlessly together.

"The seminars, or what we call the breakout sessions, to me are the real meat," he said. "We have some general sessions, which I think provide the baseline of information, but each individual has dozens of different opportunities to choose particular seminars to help them understand what they need to a little bit better."

Staff Sgt. Ulysses Alvarado, from the 479th Operations Support Squadron at Naval Air Station Pensacola, Fla., attended five seminars during the symposium and plans to make use of the things he's learned.

"What I've taken away from this symposium are some leadership traits, some skills that I didn't have before, and now I'm looking at the bigger picture (for AETC)," Alvarado said.

Chief Master Sgt. Garth Meade, the command chief for the 42nd Air Base Wing at Maxwell Air Force Base and Gunter Annex, Ala., said he was inspired by the "train today for tomorrow" premise of the event.

"As somebody who's been in (the Air Force for) 27 years, I just get a really good feeling that we're doing the right things and we're heading the right way and that we have the best professionals in the world," Meade said. "It really gives us a current report card and a kind of futuristic look at where we're going."

Many Airmen praised the value of the symposium; however, due to fiscal constraints, AETC will now hold the symposium every other year instead of annually. Rice said it's all a part of a new culture of cost consciousness.

"I'm already seeing it," the general said. "If you just look around at what's going on in the command -- from what we're doing in distance learning; what we're doing in bringing electronic capability into the classrooms with different ways of providing the instruction; what we're doing with bringing more into the simulator environment; what we're thinking about in terms of purchases of the next generation of our T-38 and that it's not just an airplane -- it's a whole system that's not only going to bring dividends to us in AETC but to the whole combat air forces in the way that we train. It will be revolutionary.

Cost consciousness will free up dollars to put back into training and education, Rice said. However, he said he foresees even bigger revenues generated by the ideas of motivated AETC Airmen.



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