Portsmouth News

Overhaul of training for Navy officers

New detailed assessment after chiefs admit current programme outdated

- By TOM COTTERILL Defence correspond­ent tom.cotterill@thenews.co.uk

A MAJOR overhaul into how the Royal Navy teaches its ‘high-flying’ officers is set to begin next month after the Senior Service admitted its current training programme had ‘fallen behind’ industry standards.

Young officers will no longer face a ‘grilling’ from a ship’s captain, demonstrat­ing what they have learned during their first concerted spell at sea after basic training.

Instead, they will be expected to draw upon all they’ve accumulate­d over three months on a front-line warship and explain how they might respond to an emergency, demonstrat­ing leadership, knowledge and the ability to think on their feet.

The detailed assessment is the most significan­t change to the 12 weeks of common fleet time, which introduces most junior officers to the day-to-day running, routine and life aboard an operationa­l warship – from patrol vessels all the way up to flagship aircraft carrier HMS Queen Elizabeth.

Every year around 200 officers undergo the spell at sea but the actual training package itself had not been reviewed for some time, ‘falling behind the industry standard for equivalent training for junior managers’, a navy spokesman said.

The Senior Service’s training management branch has spent the past two years working to adapt the experience making it more relevant to the Fleet of the 2020s.

Leading the refresh is Lieutenant Alexandra Head. She said: ‘A review of Royal Navy workplace training has been due for some time.

‘The new assessment is designed to give modern-day learners holistic feedback in line with current coaching and mentoring practices.

‘People today expect modern training. Our sea training needs to reflect that.’

The first group of 80 newlycommi­ssioned officers will go through the new look Common Fleet Time at the end of August. As well as the new final assessment, the refreshed training involves a considerab­ly smaller ‘learning journal’ – known in the navy as a task book – for officers to complete on board. Students will also gain work experience in each department, rather than their chosen specialist branch such as logistics or warfare.

 ??  ?? CHANGE Sub-Lieutenant Abbey Ovens a young officer under training, on HMS Queen Elizabeth
CHANGE Sub-Lieutenant Abbey Ovens a young officer under training, on HMS Queen Elizabeth

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