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(4) Conduct professional military training in the following areas. The length and content of the training is
established by the proponent (except where noted).
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(a) Army values.
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(b) Physical readiness training (IAW FM 7-22).
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(c) Personal finance (eight hours).
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(d) Drill and ceremonies.
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(e) Branch history/museum tour (if available).
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(f) Army customs and courtesies.
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(g) Army Traffic Safety Training Program IAW AR 385-10, paragraph 11-7a (Introductory Training Course I)
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(5) For AIT courses greater than 23 weeks long, re-qualify on individual weapon.
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(6) Complete additional WTBDs as directed by commandant and approved by DCG-IMT.
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Amount and type of control/phase privileges
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a. During IET, the cadre leadership should evolve from asserting total control over Soldiers to the point where it
duplicates the leadership environment in operational units. This gradual change supports the transformation program,
and allows the DSs, AIT PSGs, and/or squad leaders to gauge each Soldier’s self-discipline and maintain or relinquish
control accordingly.
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b. Privileges/limitations for IET Soldiers.
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(1) Brigade commanders or the senior U.S. Army commanders at the training location are the approval
authority for granting or withholding privileges IAW Table 2-1. Soldiers are granted additional freedom as they
demonstrate self-discipline and the ability to accept responsibility. These are privileges, not rights, and as such, are
withheld, modified, or withdrawn based upon performance, mission, and program requirements. Privileges granted in
IET will support the phased training program, which establishes intermediate goals to facilitate the transformation from
volunteer to Soldier. Maximum privileges authorized for IET are listed in table 2-1.
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