Oct. 9, 2006, 9:26PM

Lower standards help Army bring in recruits
It beat its goal by allowing more scores below a set aptitude level
Associated Press

WASHINGTON - The U.S. Army recruited more than 2,600 soldiers under
new lower aptitude standards this year, helping the service beat its
goal of 80,000 recruits in the throes of an unpopular war and mounting
casualties.
ADVERTISEMENT

The recruiting mark comes a year after the Army missed its target by
the widest margin since 1979, which had triggered a boost in the
number of recruiters, increased bonuses and changes in standards.

The Army recruited 80,635 soldiers, roughly 7,000 more than last year.
Of those, about 70,000 were first-time recruits who had never served
before.

According to statistics obtained by The Associated Press, 3.8 percent
of the first-time recruits scored below certain aptitude levels. In
previous years, the Army had allowed only 2 percent of its recruits to
have low aptitude scores. That limit was increased last year to 4
percent, the maximum allowed by the Defense Department.

The Army said all the recruits with low scores had received high
school diplomas. In a written statement, the Army said good test
scores do not necessarily equate to quality soldiers. Test-taking
ability, the Army said, does not measure loyalty, duty, honor,
integrity or courage.

Daniel Goure, vice president of the Lexington Institute, a private
research group, said there is a "fine balance between the need for a
certain number of recruits and the standards you set."

"Tests don't tell you the answer to the most critical question for the
Army: how will you do in combat?" Goure said. But, he added, accepting
too many recruits with low test scores could increase training costs
and leave technical jobs unfilled. "The absolute key for the Army is a
high-school diploma," he said.

About 17 percent of the first-time recruits, or about 13,600, were
accepted under waivers for various medical, moral or criminal
problems, including misdemeanor arrests or drunken driving. That is a
slight increase from last year, the Army said.

The Army said the waiver process recognizes that people can overcome
past mistakes and become law-abiding citizens.

Reply via email to