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1. Q. What does ADP 7-0 cover?
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2. Q. What ADP Covers Training Units and Developing Leaders?
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ADP 7-0

Training units and Developing leaders

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1. Q. What does ADP 7-0 cover? A: Training Units and Developing Leaders
2. Q. What ADP Covers Training Units and Developing Leaders? A: ADP 7-0
3. Q. Para 1 What is the Army’s life-blood? A: Unit training and leader development
4 Q. Para 1 What are the three training domains the Army uses? A: 1. Institutional 2. Operational 3. Self-development
5. Q. Para 2 Who is responsible for training units and developing leaders? A: The Commander
6. Q. Para 2 How do Commanders exercise the responsibility to train units and develop leaders? through formal and informal chains, assisted by officers and NCO, by developing and executing of progressive, challenging, and realistic training.
7. Q. Para 3 Where does training begin for Soldiers? A: Training begins in the generating force
8. Q. Para 4 Soldiers and leaders should train to master what? individual and unit collective tasks that support the unit’s mission-essential tasks.
9. Q. Para 4 Who must train as part of a combined arms team? A: Individuals, teams, sections, and units train to standard as part of a combined arms team.
10. Q. Para 4 What Training Events or Events link together as a comprehensive progressive and sequential training and leader development program, providing the experiences necessary for building ready units? A: Major training events, combat training center exercises, and operational deployments
11. Q. Para 4 What must Commanders do to ensure leaders can meet the prerequisites to attend and get the most benefit from institutional training? must allocate time during operational assignments
12. Q. Para 5 Who supports both the operating and generating forces? A: Army Civilians
13. Q. Para 5 What is the Major benefit to having Army Civilians supporting our forces? A: Army civilians provide the skills and continuity essential to the functioning of Army organizations and programs
14. Q. Para 6 What is considered as important as institutional training and operational assignments? A: Self Development
15. Q. Para 6 Who is responsible for Self-development training? A: Self-development is a personal responsibility
16. Q. Para 6 What is the purpose of Self-development? A: Self-development enhances qualifications for a current position or helps prepare an individual for future positions
17. Q Para 6 What must Soldiers and Civilians do to understand both personal strengths and gaps in skills, knowledge, and behaviors? A: all Soldiers and civilians must be completely honest with themselves to understand their strengths and weaknesses
18. Q Para 7 Why does the Army Train? A: The Army trains to provide ready forces to commanders worldwide
19. Q Para 7 Why do Units Train? to prepare for their mission and adapt to any changes in an operational environment
20. Q Para 8 What is the institutional training domain? A: The Army’s institutional training and education system. includes training base centers and schools.
21. Q Para 9 What is the Operational Training domain? training done in the field, such as JRTC .
22. Q Para 10 What is the self-development training domain? Reinforces and expands the knowledge base and self-awareness. It compliments institutional and operational learning.
23. Q Para 11 What does Individual training allow? allows individuals to master fundamental skills
24. Q Para 12 What integrates and synchronizes the skills learned at the individual skill level? A: Collective Training
25. Q Para 12 What is the basis for collective proficiency? A: Individual skill proficiency
26. Q Para 12 What does Training in units focuses on? A: improving unit, Soldier, and leader proficiencies
27. Q Para 12 Who ensures unit training plans are prioritized and collective training executed to maximize the operational performance of the unit? A: Commanders and other leaders
28. Q Para 13 What do Soldiers and Army civilians cycle between throughout their careers? A: the institutional and operational training domains
29. Q Para 13 What compliments training, education, and experiences gained in both schools and unit assignments? individualized self-development programs
30. Q Para 13 What is critical in maintaining awareness of individual skills? A: Documentation
31. Q Para 14 What is a continuous and progressive process, spanning a leader's entire career? A: Leader development
32. Q Para 14 What is the Army Committed to? training, educating, and developing its leaders
33. Q Para 14 What develops leaders and prepares them for assignments of increased responsibility? A: Training, education, and experience in the schools and units
34. Q Para 15 What is essential to unit readiness and successful deployments? A: Competent and confident leaders
35. Q Para 16 Who is responsible for ensuring their units are capable of performing their missions? A: Commanders
36. Q Para 16 Can commanders delegate the responsibility of ensuring units are capable of performing their missions? A: No
37. Q Para 16 What makes a quantitative and qualitative difference in unit training and leader development? ​ A: Commander involvement
38. Q Para 17 How do Commanders apply the operations process to training? A: they use the steps: plan, prepare, execute, and assess
39. Q Para 17 How do Commanders Drive the process of Training? directing, leading, and assessing unit training and leader development
40. Q Para 17 How do Commanders describe their end state? A: through guidance and orders
41. Q Para 18 What does the Acronym TADSS stand for? A: training aids, devices, simulators, and simulations
42. Q Para 18 What does the Acronym ITE Stand for? A: integrated training environment
44. Q Para 18 What must commanders do to save cost but still give Soldiers tough realistic training? use the ITE(integrated training environment) and TADSS(training aid, devices, simulators, simulations)
45. Q Para 19 How do Commanders build trust and initiative in subordinates? A: by giving subordinates latitude in determining how to train their units.
46. Q Para 20 What Collective tasks should a unit train on? A: Only those collective tasks that are essential to that unit’s mission
47. Q Para 22 How should Units employ effective collective training? A: based on the Army principles of unit training
48. Q Para 22 What must Collective training be? ​ A: Training must be relevant, rigorous, realistic, challenging, and properly resourced
49. Q Para 22 Collective training provides the full range of experiences needed to produce what? A: agile, adaptive leaders and Soldiers, and versatile units
43. Q Para 18 Can the Army afford to conduct all training in a live environment? A: No
50. Q Para 22 What are the 11 principles of unit training? A: 1. Commanders and other leaders are responsible for training 2. Noncommissioned officers train individuals, crews, and small teams 3. Train to standard 4. Train as you will fight 5. Train while operating 6. Train fundamentals first 7. Train to develop
51. Q Para 23 Who is responsible for the training proficiency of their respective organizations and subordinates? ​ A: Subordinate leaders; NCO's
52. Q Para 24 Who are the primary trainers of enlisted Soldiers, crews and small teams? A: Noncommissioned officers
53. Q Para 24 Who helps officers train units? A: NCO’s
54. Q Para 24 Who develops and conducts training for their subordinates that supports the unit training plan, coachs Junior NCOs, advise senior leaders, and helps develop junior officers? A: NCO’s
55. Q Para 25 What do leaders need to establish and enforce to ensure their organizations meet mission requirements? A: Standards
56. Q Para 25 What do Leaders need to ensure their organization meets mission requirements? A: Leaders need to know and enforce standards
57. Q Para 25 If no Standard exists, what should happen? ​ A: The Commander should establish one and the next higher Commander should approve it
58. Q Para 26 What does Train as you will fight mean? A: means training under an expected operational environment for the mission
59. Q Para 26 Commanders and other leaders should replicate cultural settings as much as possible during training how can they do that? A: using role players or actual mission partners
60. Q Para 27 Why do you continue to train while you are deployed or in continuous operations? A: As units operate, they learn from formal and informal AARs and can address changes in tactics, techniques, and procedures.
61. Q Para 28 What fundamentals must units at every echelon master in order to accomplish their missions? ​ A: Basic soldiering, the Warrior Tasks, battle drills, marksmanship, fitness and MOS proficiencies
62. Q Para 28 Units proficient in fundamentals are more capable of accomplishing what? more complex collective tasks that support the unit’s METL
63. Q Para 29 How do Soldiers and Leaders develop Adaptability? A: from training under complex, changing conditions, with minimal information available to make decisions
64. Q Para 29 What leaders attribute results from training under complex, changing conditions, with minimal information available to make decisions? A: Adaptability
65. Q Para 30 What establishes the conditions that units must meet for training? A: The unit training management operation order
66. Q Para 31 What programs must Unit training plans incorporate? A: programs that improve mental and physical fitness
67. Q Para 32 Why must Units conduct maintenance? A: to ensure equipment is serviceable and available for training and mission accomplishment
68. Q Para 33 What training technique allows for simultaneous training of more than one echelon on different or complementary tasks known as? ​ A: Multi-echelon training
69. Q Para 33 What does Training multiple tasks concurrently do? A: preserves valuable time while capitalizing on the opportunity to train related tasks at the same time
70. Q Para 34 Why should Leaders follow the principles of leader development? A: to develop other leaders
71. Q Para 34 What provides leaders with enough fundamental information to help them contribute to unit collective capabilities on the day they arrive in the unit? ​ A: Schools
72. Q Para 34 When does most Leader Development occur? A: during operational assignments
73. Q Para 34 What do Leaders learn during operational assignments? to adapt to new situations. To develop through training, education, unfamiliar experiences.
74. Q Para 34 What happens when a Soldier or Leader makes a mistake? A: They Learn from the mistake
75. Q Para 34 What is considered the crucible of leader development? A: Operational assignments
76. Q Para 34 What are the Army’s seven principles of leader development? A: 1. Lead by example 2. Develop subordinate 3. Create a learning environment 4. mission command 5. develop adaptive leaders 6. to think critically and creatively 7.to know their subordinates and their families
77. Q Para 34 Which training principle prepares units and individuals to be resilient? ​ A: Train to Sustain
78. Q Para 35 Good leaders understand they are role models for others what is it they should reflect for subordinates and peers? A: They should reflect the desired leader characteristics and Lead by Example
79. Q Para 36 What is one of the most important functions of a Leader? A: developing subordinate leaders by training subordinates to be successful tactically and technically and to be prepared to assume positions of greater responsibility
80. Q Para 37 What type of Learning environment should Leaders create in their unit for their subordinates A: an environment that allows subordinates to try different solutions to problems and that they can attempt innovative solutions to prob
81. Q Para 37 What happens when Leaders in the unit create an environment where mistakes are not tolerated? A: Soldiers will not attempt to solve problems on their own out of fear of making mistakes
83. Q Para 39 Can Soldiers train on every task for every condition? A: No; They cannot train on every task for every condition, they should excel at a few tasks and then be able to adapt to new tasks
84. Q Para 39 Training must enable leaders to respond to unexpected conditions in what type of way? A: in a positive and constructive way
85. Q Para 40 What must Leaders be able to do for challenging problems A: Leaders must be able to analyze challenging problems
86. Q Para 41 How many levels down should All Leaders know their subordinates? A: at least two levels down
87. Q Para 41 What should all leaders know about their subordinates two levels down? A: their Strengths, weaknesses and capabilities
88. Q Para 41 The Army trains Leaders to know and help not only their subordinates but who else? ​ A: Their Families
89. Q Para 42 What is the primary focus of a unit when not deployed? A: Training
90. Q Para 42 What should the intensity of Training be when not deployed? A: It requires the same level of detail, intensity, and focus that a unit applies to deployed operations
82. Q Para 37 How should mistakes be handled by Leaders in a unit? A: Leaders should establish an environment for subordinates that allows subordinate leaders to make honest mistakes without prejudice and remember that they will learn more from their mistakes
91. Q Para 42 What provides a common framework for units to plan, prepare, execute, and assess training and to integrate leader development into training plans? A: The Operations Process
92. Q Para 42 What Unit level uses military decision making process (MDMP) to develop unit training plans? A: Battalion Level and higher
93. Q Para 42 What does Company Level use to develop unit training plans? A: Troop Leading Procedures (TLP’s)
94. Q Para 43 What is the purpose of unit training? A: The purpose of unit training is to build and maintain ready units to conduct unified land operations for combatant commanders.
95. Q Para 43 What do units build once they master individual and collective tasks under the conditions of their anticipated operational environment? A: Flexibility, integration, lethality, adaptability, depth and synchronization capabilities
96. Q Para 43 What will Good Training do to Soldiers and Leaders confidence and abilities? A: Good training gives Soldiers confidence in their abilities and the abilities of their leaders, forges trust, and allows the unit to adapt readily to new and different missions
97. Q Para 43 What do Leaders use training events for? A: to train, educate, and give experience to subordinates
98. Q Para 43 Who’s Job is it to coach and teach, provide feedback on performance, make on-the-spot corrections, and conduct after action reviews? A: Leaders
99. Q Para 43 What is the primary means for developing leaders? A: Unit Training
100. Q Para 44 What is the definition of METL A: METL is the doctrinal framework of fundamental tasks for which the unit was designed
101. Q Para 44 What does METL stand for? A: Mission Essential Task List
102. Q Para 44 What is the goal of METL proficiency? A: The goal of METL proficiency is to enable the unit to adapt to unexpected situations during mission execution ​
103. Q Para 44 What unit level has a Standardized unit METL? A: Brigade and above
104. Q Para 44 Who standardized Brigade and above METL’s? A: The Department of the Army
105. Q Para 44 What unit levels develop their own unit METL’s? A: Battalions and companies develop their own METL’s to support their higher headquarters
106. Q Para 44 What drives the focus of its training? A: The unit’s Mission
107. Q Para 45 What does Collective task proficiency result from? A: from developing tactical and technical, individual, leader, and lower-level collective skills through instruction, experience, and repetitive practice
118. Q Para 46 What does the Commander use to assess the unit’s readiness to conduct its mission? A: AAR’s, personal observations, and judgment
108. Q Para 45 Why do Commanders develop a unit training plan? A: to develop collective task proficiency
109. Q Para 45 How is The unit training plan is expressed to the Unit? A: in an operation order
110. Q Para 45 What type of approach do unit training plans use that progressively and systematically builds on successful task performance before progressing to more complex tasks? A: Crawl-Walk-Run approach
111. Q Para 45 What is The start point for training a task is based on? A: the leader’s assessment of current task proficiency
112. Q Para 45 Does the start point for training have to be the crawl or walk only phase? A: No; start point can be at the crawl, walk, or run level
113. Q Para 45 Once Soldiers have met the standards of a task, how do leaders challenge their Soldiers? A: by changing the conditions of the task to make it more challenging
114. Q Para 45 What does changing the conditions of a task do? A: forces Soldiers and leaders to apply previous experience to the new problem
115. Q Para 45 How long should Soldiers train on a task? A: until they master the task
116. Q Para 46 Who can assess the readiness of a mission-essential task? A: Only the commander
117. Q Para 46 What do subordinates provide in order to enable the Commander to assess the readiness of a mission-essential task? A: After Actions Reviews (AAR)
Created by: jorge1971
 

 



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