Adaptability: Time to Start Thinking about Thinking – Army Leadership to Foster a Culture of Strength of Mind, Problem Solving, Long and Short-Term Cognitive Agility, Complexity and Systems Thinking

Nonfiction, Health & Well Being, Psychology, Cognitive Psychology, History, Military
Cover of the book Adaptability: Time to Start Thinking about Thinking – Army Leadership to Foster a Culture of Strength of Mind, Problem Solving, Long and Short-Term Cognitive Agility, Complexity and Systems Thinking by Progressive Management, Progressive Management
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Progressive Management ISBN: 9781311259172
Publisher: Progressive Management Publication: February 19, 2017
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Progressive Management
ISBN: 9781311259172
Publisher: Progressive Management
Publication: February 19, 2017
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

This excellent report has been professionally converted for accurate flowing-text e-book format reproduction. The tendency to maintain familiar behaviors while evolving slowly and incrementally when faced with unfamiliar problems is the result of a gap in the US Army's understanding of adaptability and the conditions required to achieve it. Developing adaptive leaders is one of the Chief of Staff of the US Army's top priorities, yet few, if any, people seem to be talking about how to enable this critical capability. This monograph argues the US Army must foster "strength of the mind" at the individual level to enable the kind of adaptive behavior the Chief of Staff of the Army demands. Adaptability requires flexible, creative, unprejudiced, and reflective thinking; the thought patterns that enable cognitive agility. However, this kind of thinking is not something that merely happens in the mind. The interrelationship between mind, body and environment continuously and dynamically shapes the structure, functional organization, and connectivity of an individual's brain rendering them either more or less likely to sustain cognitive agility in both short-term and long-term contexts. Previous efforts to improve the Army's adaptability focused on institutional development. However, the US Army needs to do more than ask how it can inculcate adaptability through its doctrine and training programs. Rather, the question that requires further research is if the patterns in the Army's current culture and climate support the kind of thinking that enables adaptability at the individual level, or if its tendencies stifle flexible, creative, unprejudiced, and reflective thinking. The answer to this question will provide the impetus for the US Army to take steps toward actionable and enduring change.

The United States (US) Army has a tendency to maintain familiar behaviors while evolving slowly and incrementally when faced with unfamiliar problems. Robert Komer's 1972 study on the Vietnam War concluded that conventional government institutions struggled to respond optimally to the atypical problems it faced in Vietnam, prolonging the conflict.1 Almost thirty years later, April 2003 news reports attributed military success in the war in Iraq to superior agility and adaptability. Newspapers quoted Dick Cheney as attributing the successful advance on Baghdad to "brilliant military planning;" but it was the military's ability to adapt quickly to changing circumstances that seemed to win the day. At the time, it appeared the military had become significantly more agile and adaptive since the Vietnam War, but this was not the case. Not long after the initial news reports recounted the military's success, a growing resistance to the US presence amongst the Iraqi population began to bog down US forces in Iraq. A blue-ribbon panel of bipartisan, independent experts, appointed by Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld in August 2004, found the military was slow to "adapt accordingly after the insurgency started in the summer of 2003." In a mere matter of months, the military went from being an agile and adaptive force fighting a familiar threat, to one that was slow to evolve once the shape of that threat morphed into something unexpected, just as it had in Vietnam. Over the past decade, the US Army has attempted to improve its adaptability when faced with unfamiliar problems by developing and revising its doctrine and training, yet it continues to struggle.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

This excellent report has been professionally converted for accurate flowing-text e-book format reproduction. The tendency to maintain familiar behaviors while evolving slowly and incrementally when faced with unfamiliar problems is the result of a gap in the US Army's understanding of adaptability and the conditions required to achieve it. Developing adaptive leaders is one of the Chief of Staff of the US Army's top priorities, yet few, if any, people seem to be talking about how to enable this critical capability. This monograph argues the US Army must foster "strength of the mind" at the individual level to enable the kind of adaptive behavior the Chief of Staff of the Army demands. Adaptability requires flexible, creative, unprejudiced, and reflective thinking; the thought patterns that enable cognitive agility. However, this kind of thinking is not something that merely happens in the mind. The interrelationship between mind, body and environment continuously and dynamically shapes the structure, functional organization, and connectivity of an individual's brain rendering them either more or less likely to sustain cognitive agility in both short-term and long-term contexts. Previous efforts to improve the Army's adaptability focused on institutional development. However, the US Army needs to do more than ask how it can inculcate adaptability through its doctrine and training programs. Rather, the question that requires further research is if the patterns in the Army's current culture and climate support the kind of thinking that enables adaptability at the individual level, or if its tendencies stifle flexible, creative, unprejudiced, and reflective thinking. The answer to this question will provide the impetus for the US Army to take steps toward actionable and enduring change.

The United States (US) Army has a tendency to maintain familiar behaviors while evolving slowly and incrementally when faced with unfamiliar problems. Robert Komer's 1972 study on the Vietnam War concluded that conventional government institutions struggled to respond optimally to the atypical problems it faced in Vietnam, prolonging the conflict.1 Almost thirty years later, April 2003 news reports attributed military success in the war in Iraq to superior agility and adaptability. Newspapers quoted Dick Cheney as attributing the successful advance on Baghdad to "brilliant military planning;" but it was the military's ability to adapt quickly to changing circumstances that seemed to win the day. At the time, it appeared the military had become significantly more agile and adaptive since the Vietnam War, but this was not the case. Not long after the initial news reports recounted the military's success, a growing resistance to the US presence amongst the Iraqi population began to bog down US forces in Iraq. A blue-ribbon panel of bipartisan, independent experts, appointed by Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld in August 2004, found the military was slow to "adapt accordingly after the insurgency started in the summer of 2003." In a mere matter of months, the military went from being an agile and adaptive force fighting a familiar threat, to one that was slow to evolve once the shape of that threat morphed into something unexpected, just as it had in Vietnam. Over the past decade, the US Army has attempted to improve its adaptability when faced with unfamiliar problems by developing and revising its doctrine and training, yet it continues to struggle.

More books from Progressive Management

Cover of the book Rule of Law Handbook: A Practitioner's Guide For Judge Advocates - Iraq and Afghanistan Wars, History, Key Players, International Legal Framework, Institutional and Social Context, Narratives by Progressive Management
Cover of the book Naval Operations Concept 2010: Maritime Security, Power Projection, Force Structure, Seapower Strategy for Navy, Marines, and Coast Guard by Progressive Management
Cover of the book 2018 Energy Department Report on Assessment of Electricity Disruption Incident Response Capabilities, Cybersecurity of Federal Networks and Critical Infrastructure, Cyber Attack Threats and Impacts by Progressive Management
Cover of the book BRAIN 2025: A Scientific Vision - Brain Research through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies (BRAIN) Report on New NIH Neuroscience Initiative, Neurological and Psychiatric Disorders by Progressive Management
Cover of the book Air Force Doctrine Document 6-0: Command and Control - C2 Processes, Planning, Technology, Training, Transfer of Forces and Command Authority by Progressive Management
Cover of the book 21st Century Adult Cancer Sourcebook: Oropharyngeal Cancer - Clinical Data for Patients, Families, and Physicians by Progressive Management
Cover of the book Evolution of United States Army Deployment Operations: The Santiago Campaign Expedition’s Mobilization through Tampa, Florida in 1898 to Prepare for Invasion of Cuba, Reception and Staging Process by Progressive Management
Cover of the book People's Liberation Army After Next: China's PLA, Air Force Aircraft, Ballistic and Cruise Missiles, EMP, DF-11, DF-15, Silkworm, Fighter Aircraft, Taiwan, Advanced Technology, Military Space by Progressive Management
Cover of the book Personnel Replacement Operations During Operations Desert Storm and Desert Shield: Interviews to Assess Theater Replacements in the First Gulf War in Iraq, Doctrinal Publications and Echelon by Progressive Management
Cover of the book Army Research Laboratory Technical Report: Human Purposive Movement Theory (ARL-TR-5954) Ground Movement Detection and Identification Technologies Used in Military and Law Enforcement Settings by Progressive Management
Cover of the book Apollo and America's Moon Landing Program - Oral Histories of Managers, Engineers, and Workers (Set 6) Brock Stone, Ernst Stuhlinger, von Ehrenfried by Progressive Management
Cover of the book 21st Century NBC WMD CBRN Weapons and Terrorism: Water Security Handbook - Planning for and Responding to Drinking Water Contamination Threats and Incidents (Water Utility Planning Guide) by Progressive Management
Cover of the book Cyberspace Cybersecurity: First American International Strategy for Cyberspace, White House and GAO Reports and Documents, Internet Data Security Protection, International Web Standards by Progressive Management
Cover of the book Army Correspondence Course: Unit Ministry Team (UMT) Crisis Counseling - The Chaplain Assistant's Role (Subcourse CH1313), plus Army Guide to the Prevention of Suicide and Self-Destructive Behavior by Progressive Management
Cover of the book 21st Century Understanding Cancer Toolkit: Coping with Advanced Cancer - Metastatic Cancer, Caregiver Support, Palliative Care and Hospice, Advance Directives, End-of-Life Care, Pain Control, Grief by Progressive Management
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy