Perspectives on Reserve Attrition


Book Description

This paper reports and analyzes results of the ARI Survey of Army National Guard/Army Reserve. Supervisors and peers of attritees were asked to rate 36 reasons for leaving the Reserves. Their responses provide information that may be useful in understanding the high turnover rates of Reserve personnel. However, we hypothesize that the survey items may reflect a smaller number of unobserved factors that include conflicts with civilian job or school, lack of leisure time, conflict with family responsibilities, dissatisfaction with Reserve duties, low pay and lack of promotion potential, and health problems. Factor analysis is used to test the factor structure hypothesis. Peer and supervisor responses are compared to identify differences in frequencies and in the factor structure. Because peers and supervisors were asked to rate separation motives for the same attritees, differences in responses between the two groups should be a function of variations in perceptions. Keywords: Morale, Army personnel.




Research Report


Book Description




Organizational and Cultural Causes of Army First-Term Attrition


Book Description

The U.S. Army invests significant resources in recruiting, training, and preparing new soldiers. When a soldier does not complete a full contract term, the Army views this as a net loss. The goal of the research summarized in this report is to determine whether organizational factors matter for producing attrition and to generate hypotheses regarding the mechanisms by which organizational factors generate attrition. The authors made use of the random assignment of soldiers to their first battalion to determine whether the "luck of the draw"-the battalion to which the soldier is assigned and the senior noncommissioned officer (NCO) at that battalion-is directly linked to the observed variation across assignments in eventual first-term outcomes. The authors complemented that analysis with interviews exploring the factors that could be driving differences across units, such as leadership and command culture, availability of soldier supports, management of deployment and training cycles, and installation amenities. The quantitative part of the report shows that organizational factors affect attrition above and beyond the effects of soldier characteristics. The qualitative part highlights potential pathways through which battalion-level characteristics might manifest in differential attrition outcomes. Rather than conceptualizing attrition as a soldier being "fired" for poor performance, this report describes attrition as a process in which leadership may fail to provide needed interventions or to perpetuate a culture in which soldiers want to and are able to remain in service. The authors identify opportunities to address the factors under the Army's control that are associated with attrition. Book jacket.
















Selected Rand Abstracts


Book Description

Includes publications previously listed in the supplements to the Index of selected publications of the Rand Corporation (Oct. 1962-Feb. 1963).