THE INTELLIGENCE SCHOOL
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP78-06370A000100010016-8
Release Decision:
RIPPUB
Original Classification:
S
Document Page Count:
55
Document Creation Date:
December 12, 2016
Document Release Date:
January 3, 2002
Sequence Number:
16
Case Number:
Publication Date:
February 1, 1967
Content Type:
BULL
File:
Attachment | Size |
---|---|
![]() | 2.19 MB |
Body:
CPYRG
GROUP 1
EXCLUDED FROM AUTOMATIC
DOWNORADINO AND
DECLASSIFICATION
370A0001OO0deRif-8
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IN THIS ISSUE ....
A plea for assistance in registering professional EODs
in the required Intelligence Orientation Course is made
on page 1.
The parking problem at 1000 N. Glebe Road is reviewed
on page 2.
OTR courses scheduled for February, March, April,
and May are listed beginning on page 5.
The second article in the series "OTR as a Support
Organization" features the Intelligence School. This
presentation starts on page 16.
Training Selection Board programs requiring the attention
of Training Officers in the near future are outlined on
pages 43 and 44.
Selected courses offered in the U. S. Department of
Agriculture Graduate School's new Curriculum of
Computer Sciences are noted on pages 45 and 46.
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CONTENTS
Bulletin Board
OTR Calendar
The Intelligence School
Non-Agency Training
Interagency Training Programs
Training Selection Board Programs
Other External Training Notes
Directory of Training Officers
Office of Training Directory
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BULLETIN BOARD
INTELLIGENCE
ORIENTATION
FOR EOD's
To facilitate registration of professional EODs in
the four-week Intelligence Orientation Course
(Introduction to Intelligence and Introduction to
Communism) as required by he Office
of Personnel sends the Registrar's and the Instructor's
copy of a completed Form 73, "Request for Internal
Training, " to the Registrar, OTR. The Registrar
then negotiates with the component to which each
individual is being assigned and arranges specific
dates for attendance. To accommodate the volume
of students now required to take this course, it has
been necessary to schedule as many runnings of this
course each year as the available classrooms and
instructional staff will allow. It is also essential to
utilize all spaces available in each running. In view
of these circumstances, last-minute cancellations
and postponements requested by Training Officers
or Training Assistants after employees have been
registered have become an increasing problem,
since every effort must then be made to fill each
class. Training Officers are requested, therefore,
to avoid, whenever possible, postponement of the
attendance of employees in their offices at Intelligence
Orientation Courses, for such a request starts a
chain reaction that must involve Training Officers
and employees in other offices beyond the Registrar
Staff itself.
OTR'S ADP Following the pilot running of OTR's ADP Orientation
ORIENTATION Course, both the January and February offerings
were promptly oversubscribed. Training Officers
are urged to send in applications as early as possible
for the remaining runnings scheduled this fiscal
year, 21 - 23 March, 2 - 4 May, or 13 - 15 June.
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SUPPORT An additional three spaces have been added to the OTR
SERVICES Support School's Support Services Review: Trends
REVIEW and Highlights Course to accommodate some non-DDS
applicants. Acceptance will be based on the direct
relationship of the content of the course to the
individual's assignment.
CS DESK The two-week period of training for CS CTs referred
TRAINING to in the December and January Bulletins as "Head-
quarters Desk Training" has been redesignated to
correspond with the elements which make up this
training. Subsequent course schedules will show
this as CS Records I (two days), CS Records II
(five days), and CS Desk Orientation (three days).
The next sequence of this training begins on 31 May.
OTR The May offering of Management, for employees in
MANAGEMENT grades GS- 11 through GS- 14, will be given at the
COURSE The course will open
on Sunday, 7 May, and will end Friday, 12 May.
Details will be outlined in a later announcement.
PARKING
AT
1000 N. GLEBE
Parking spaces at 1000 N. Glebe Road (Broyhill
Building) are assigned to employees who work in the
building (Virginia Public Roads, a branch of DIA,
and the Office of Training). Twelve spaces (104 - 1 15)
are reserved for visitors and limited to two-hour
occupancy. There are no spaces reserved for students
in courses given at the building. Rental of space
at the adjacent bowling alley or street parking only
is available to them.
There is limited shuttle service to Glebe--only
from Langley Headquarters. There is no direct
service from other Agency buildings. Shuttles
depart from Langley on the half hour, and from
Glebe on the hour.
Training Officers are expected to inform employees
of the parking problem at the time they confirm
attendance at courses.
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REQUESTS
REGARDING
PUBLICATIONS
PUBLIC Instructors and Training Assistants are reminded
ADDRESS that requests for recordings and public address
FACILITIES facilities to be used in connection with classes,
briefings, or other training presentations should
be forwarded to the Audio Aids Section of OTR's
Instructional Services Branch as early as is
practicable. Adequate advance notice enables the
technicians to arrange rooms for each specific need
so that the most satisfactory presentation may be
made.
NATIONAL The 30th session of the National Interdepartmental
INTER- Seminar on Problems of Development and Internal
DEPARTMENTAL Defense will be from 13 March to 7 April. The
SEMINARS Agency is expected to fill its quota of eight.
(at FSI) Attendance at NIS is a prerequisite to assignment
of officers of the CS to key positions in under-
developed countries. The OTR Chiefs of Station
Seminars are scheduled so that CS officers may
attend both NIS and COS without conflict. Subsequent
1967 dates of NIS are: 1 - 26 May; 10 July - 4 August;
5 - 29 September; and, 23 October - 17 November.
Attendance is arranged through the Agency's Senior
Training Officers.
TRAINING has
Training Officers or Training Assistants requiring
additional copies of the OTR Bulletin or the OTR
Schedule of Courses please call the Registrar's
office, extension Similarly, call the same
extension to report any changes in office locations
or office reorganization so that distribution lists
may be kept up to date.
is acting
as Training icer for Finance/DDS.
CORRECTION Those who may be preserving the article on the
Career Training Program in the January Bulletin
should correct the glaring error on page 17, the
first line of the second paragraph. The reference
should be. to the Junior Officer Training Program
instead of "Senior" as rendered.
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COURSES
CLERICAL OTR's refresher courses in typewriting and shorthand
TRAINING AND will be given:
TESTING
20 March - 14 April
24 April - 19 May
29 May - 23 June
Before employees take either typing or shorthand or
both, they are required to take pretests, which are
given by Clerical Training/Support School/OTR.
The results are used by the instructor to determine
the level of the course best suited to the employees'
needs and capabilities.
For the above courses, the required pretests are
scheduled as follows:
Typing: 15 March, 19 April, 24 May
Shorthand: 16 March, 20 April, 25 May
Submission to AIB/RS of a Form 73 for a Clerical
Refresher course is all that is required to initiate
testing. Training Officers are notified directly by
CTF as to time and place employees are to report
for their tests.
QUALIFICATION TESTS
OTR's Clerical Training Faculty gives the Agency's
tests in typewriting and shorthand to clerical employees
who want to qualify as typists and stenographers.
Training Officers or Personnel Officers arran e
registration directly with the CTF, extension
CTF notifies the Training Officers or Personnel
Officers of the results of the testing.
Typing: 20 February, 13 March, 27 March,
17 April, 8 May, 22 May
Shorthand; 21 February, 14 March, 28 March,
18 April, 9 May, 23 May
Note: All clerical testing and training is given at 1016
16th Street, N. W.
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OTR CALENDAR
FEBRUARY
S
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27
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Administrative Procedures
ADP Orientation
Air Ope rations
China Familiarization
CIA Review
Clerical Refresher
Conference Techniques
Counterintelligence Familiarization
Counterintelligence Operations
Field Finance and Logistics
Information Reporting, Reports, and Requirements
Information Reports Familiarization
Intelligence Research (Map and Photo
Interpretation) (for NPIC)
Introduction to Communism
Introduction to Intelligence
Management (GS-11 - 14)
Operations Familiarization
Orientation to Intelligence (for CTs)
Orientation for Overseas
Orientation for Training Officers
Supervision (GS-5 - 10)
Support Services Review: Trends and Highlights
Vietnam Orientation
Writing Workshop (Basic) (for NPIC)
27 Feb - 3 Mar
14 - 16 Feb
6 Feb - 3 Mar
6 - 10 Feb
14 Feb
13 Feb - 10 Mar
15 Feb - 26 Apr
6 - 15 Feb
27 Feb - 17 Mar
6 - 24 Feb
27 Feb - 17 Mar
6 - 10 Feb; 13 - 17 Feb
13 Feb - 1 Mar
27 Feb - 10 Mar
13 - 24 Feb
6 - 10 Feb
27 Feb - 24 Mar
27 Feb - 10 Mar
7 - 8 Feb
1 - 2 Feb
27 Feb - 3 Mar
28 Feb - 3 Mar
20 - 24 Feb
13 Feb - 3 Mar
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MARCH
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18
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20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
ADP Orientation
Challenge of Worldwide Communism (for CTs)
China Familiarization
CIA Review
CS Records I
Clerical Refresher
Information Reports Familiarization
Intelligence Techniques (for CTs)
Introduction to Communism
JCS-DIA Briefing
Management (GS-11 - 14)
Orientation for Overseas
Vietnam Orientation
21 - 23 Mar
13 Mar - 7 Apr
6 - 10 Mar
14 May
27, 29, 31 Mar
20 Mar - 14 Apr
13 - 24 Mar
27 - 31 Mar
13 - 31 Mar
20 - 31 Mar
28 - 29 Mar
27 - 31 Mar
13 - 18 Mar (Saturday)
13 - 31 Mar
13 Mar-7Apr
7-8Ada r
20 24 Mar
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APRIL
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Administrative Procedures
Challenge of Worldwide Communism (for CTs)
Chiefs of Station Seminar
China Familiarization
CIA Review
Clerical Refresher
CS Records II
CS Records III
Counterintelligence Familiarization
Field Finance and Logistics
Information Reporting, Reports, and Requirements
Intelligence Techniques (for CTs)
Introduction to Intelligence
Midcareer Executive Development
Orientation for Overseas
Senior Management Seminar (GS- 15 - 18)
Supervision (GS-5 - 10)
Support Services Review: Trends and Highlights
Vietnam Orientation
24 - 28 Apr
3 - 28 Apr
17 - 28 Apr
3 - 7 Apr
11 Apr
24 Apr - 19 May
3 - 7 Apr
10 - 11 Apr
3 - 12 Apr
10 - 28 Apr
10 - 28 Apr
10 - 28 Apr
3 - 14 Apr; 17 - 28 Apr
10 Apr - 19 May
4 - 5 Apr
23 - 28 Apr
24 - 28 Apr
4 - 7 Apr
10 - 14 Apr
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24
25
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29
30
31
ADP Orientation
China Familiarization
CIA Review
Clandestine Scientific and Technical Operations
Clandestine Services Review
Clerical Refresher
Counterintelligence Familiarization
Covert Action Operations
CS Records I (for CS CTs)
Grid (for non-CS CTs)
Information Reports Familiarization
Intelligence Research Techniques (for NPIC)
Intelligence Review
Introduction to Communism
Introduction to Intelligence
Management (GS-11 - 14)
Management Planning
Operations (for CS CTs)
Operations Familiarization (for CTs)
Operations Support
Orientation for Overseas
Special Operations
Vietnam Orientation
Writing Workshop (Basic)
Writing Workshop (Intermediate)
2 4 May
22- 26 May
9 May
8 - 19 May
31 May - 9 Jun
29 May - 23 Jun
22 May - 2 Jun
1 - 19 May
31 May - 1 Jun
31 May - 10 Jun
8 - 12 May; 15 - 19 May
15-_26May
1- 12 May
1 - 12 May
22 May - 2 Jun
7 (Sun) 12 May
22 - 26 May
I May - 4 Aug
1 - 26 May
B May - 2 Jun
2- 3 May
I May - 18 Aug
15 - 19 May
9 May - 1 Jun
8 - 31 May
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For clerical employees who support the CS at headquarters.
Covers the organization, functions, procedures, and regula-
tions of the Agency. Emphasis is on the CS.
For users and potential users (not senior managers or ADP
specialists) of computer services within the Agency. A general
orientation on automatic data processing is provided. Grade
level GS-14 and below.
For Career Trainees. The historical development of the
USSR and Communist China is reviewed, together with an
examination of the doctrine, organization, and operations
of the communist movement throughout the world.
For chiefs of small and medium-sized stations, deputy chiefs
of stations, and chiefs of bases. Focus is on the person of
the Chief of Station and his administrative and operational
responsibilities. Enrollment limited to 18.
For professional employees. Covers survey of mainland
China's geography, history, economic factors, and its role
in foreign affairs. Provides an introduction to the Chinese
language, including pronunciation.
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For all returnees from the field. Covers recent organizational
developments in the Agency. Includes the security reindoctrina-
tion lecture.
For middle-grade and senior officers of the GS and DDS&T.
Covers collection responsibilities of the CS in S&T operations,
fundamentals of guided missiles, biological and chemical
warfare, and use of nuclear power. Field trips. Enrollment
limited to 20.
For CS Career Trainees. Covers those facets of the
Headquarters support and guidance role which would be useful
to the CT to know prior to assignment to a desk. This is
part of a two-week program which includes CS Records I
and II.
Clandestine Services Records I (Introduction) (1 wk - part time)
For all levels of CS personnel. The CS Records System: input,
maintenance and retrieval methods, and the disposition, disposal
and destruction of records. A prerequisite for CS Records II
and III and to CI Familiarization, Cl Support and CI Operations.
Enrollment limited to 40.
Clandestine Services Records II (Biographic Research) (1 wk - part time)
For all levels of CS personnel. Principles, techniques and
specific procedures used in exploiting the records of the Agency
and other resources for biographic information. Enrollment
limited to 25.
Clandestine Services Records III (Records Officers Briefing) (2 days-
part time)
Completion of this course is one of the requirements to
qualify as a CS Records Officer. A review of operational
factors and relationships upon which decisions are made to
destroy or retain CS operations records; to amend, index or
file elements; or to desensitize documents or files. Enrollment
limited to 20.
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For CS officers who have recently returned from overseas
assignment, Covers the organization and function of the
directorates, the DDP in detail. Enrollment limited to 40.
For clerical employees, to improve their accuracy and to
develop their speed in either shorthand or typewriting.
Employees may take separate instruction in either skill.
For Agency officers responsible for planning and for leading
group discussions and conferences. The role of an effective
participant is also emphasized. Enrollment limited to 12.
For Agency personnel who need knowledge of the essential
elements of counterintelligence but who are not expected to
be CI operations officers, and for personnel who will support
CI operations. Covers both U. S. and Agency policy and
doctrine for CI, as well as basic tactics. Enrollment limited
to 15.
For CS officers who will plan, manage, and engage in CI
operations in the field or who will guide and support CI
programs and operations in the field from Headquarters.
Emphasis is placed on the identification and selection of CI
targets and the organization and implementation of CI operations
in the field. Enrollment limited to 10.
For CS officers responsible for supporting and conducting CA
operations at Headquarters or in the field. Provides a compre-
hensive orientation of current operations with
priority given to critical situations in specific nations. Enroll-
ment limited to 20.
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Field Finance and Logistics (3 wks all day)
For operational support assistants and support officers re-
quired to maintain budgetary, financial, and property records
at a Class B, C, Type II, or Type III Station. Emphasis is
on all facets of field financial responsibilities.
For Career Trainees. The subject of interpersonal relation-
ships is examined.
Information Reporting, Reports, and Requirements (3 wks - all day)
For CS employees required to report intelligence information.
Covers official policies and procedures for completing a
report as well as practical exercises. Enrollment limited to 10.
Information Reports Familiarization (1 wk - all day)
For CS employees assigned as junior reports officers or those
assigned to type CS reports and intelligence cables. Enroll-
ment limited to eight.
Intelligence Research (Map and Photo Interpretation) (9 days - all day)
For professionals needing to know how to use maps and aerial
and ground photography for intelligence purposes. Provides
comprehensive coverage on obtaining data from maps and an
introduction to photo interpretation.
Intelligence Research Techniques (Z wks - all day)
For analysts. Covers each stage of the research process from
the orgination of an intelligence topic to writing a skeletal
report. A research project is performed as a practical
exercise.
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Intelligence Techniques (3 wks - all day)
For Career Trainees. Provides instruction and practice in
the Agency's techniques used in the production of finished
intelligence.
For professional employees at EOD. Covers historical develop-
ment of the USSR and Communist China and the doctrine, organi-
zation and operations of the Communist movement.
Introduction to Intelligence (2 wks - all day)
For professional employees at EOD. Covers concepts of intelli-
gence, the intelligence agencies of the U. S. Government, and
the Agency's responsibility for collection, production, and
dissemination of intelligence. Includes the fundamentals of
American beliefs and practices.
JCS-DIA Briefing (2 days -all day)
For middle-level officers of DIA. General review of the Agency.
Management (1 wk - all day)
For officers in Grades GS-11 through GS-14. Covers up-to-date
practices and attitudes applied in planning, directing and manag-
ing the work of others.
Managerial Grid (1 wk - all day)
For selected middle-level officers. The Managerial Grid concept
of classifying leadership and managerial styles is examined.
Personal managerial styles are analyzed through team and
individual exercises designed to permit the understanding of
the managerial styles of others to serve as a means of diagnosing
problems which prevent effectiveness at any organizational
level. Priority will be given to individuals whose supervisors
have had the grid.
Midcareer Executive Development (6 wks - full time- 240 hrs)
For designated midcareerists. Covers the activities of compo-
nents of the Agency, the U. S. Government in its national and
international setting, and problems of management.
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For CTs who are preparing for careers as case officers.
Covers fundamentals of CS activities, emphasizing tradecraft
techniques, agent handling, reporting, project management,
and FI, CI, and CA objectives.
For CS and non-CS officers whose responsibilities in support
of operations require adequate familiarization with functions
of the case officer and with the programs and operations of
the CS.
For CS employees with assignments overseas which will
require their supporting the operational activities of CS
officers in the field. Covers name checks, dispatch and
cable writing, records maintenance, operational expenses,
travel claims, and tradecraft familiarization. Enrollment
limited to 30.
For Career Trainees. Introduces the concepts of intelligence,
the structure of the U. S. intelligence community, and the
responsibilities of the Agency for collection, production, and
dissemination of intelligence.
For employees (and spouses) assigned to an overseas post for
the first time. Covers the Agency's mission and functions,
security, cover, legal and medical advice, and working
effectively with people of other cultures.
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Senior Management Seminar (1 wk - all day - starts Sunday p. m.)
For GS-15s and above. Selection by Senior Training Officers.
Conducted by contract instructor; features managerial grid.
For employees in grades GS-5 through GS-10 who have
supervisory responsibilities. Explores current thinking
on "the role of the supervisor" in terms of personal
behavior, responsibility for subordinates, and organizational
and individual needs. Provides materials and a setting
for experiencing and examining interteam and intrateam
skills and activities.
Support Services Review: Trends and Highlights (3 1/2 days - all day
For professional Support Service employees GS-9 through
GS- 15. Emphasizes significant trends and developments
within the Agency's support activities, and includes
presentations on ADP, records management, and planning,
programming, and budgeting.
Vietnam Orientation (1 wk - all day)
For senior and middle-grade officers of the CS and for junior
CS officers whose work is directly related to the Agency's
role in Vietnam. A familiarization on the Agency's mission,
doctrine and programs in the area, with a goal to increasing
capabilities for planning, supporting, and conducting operations.
Writing Workshop (Basic) (4 wks - morning - Tues & Thurs)
For professional employees. (Non-professionals may attend
under certain circumstances.) Covers basic principles of
grammar and rhetoric, and elements of sentence construction
and paragraph structure.
Writing Workshop (Intermediate) (4 wks - part time - Mon & Wed)
For professional employees. (Non-professionals may attend
under certain circumstances.) Covers principles of good
writing, including clarity, accuracy, and logic.
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OTR as a Support Organization:
The Intelligence School of the Office of Training is responsible
for that part of the total Agency training mission that is related
to skills, techniques, and methods applied in the production of
f inished intelligence and to orientation and briefing concerning
the intelligence community and the Agency's mission and function
in the national security structure. Because its responsibilities
fall into two general areas, the School is composed of two faculties,
the Intelligence Production Faculty (IPF) and the Orientation and
Briefing Faculty (OBF). The pages that follow identify and describe
the major activities of these two faculties.
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The basic criterion against which all Intelligence School pro-
grams are evaluated is that of current reality. It is true, of course,
that some training and briefing programs are concerned with
ideas, concepts, motivations - - even doctrinal philosophy; but
even the appearance of academic retreat to the ivory tower is
avoided. In other words, the School's programs must be respon-
sive to the current requirements of the Agency and must be
continually developed and revised to maintain currency.
Every effort is made to keep abreast of changes of all kinds
within the Agency and the intelligence community -- changes in
organization, responsibilities, methods, and doctrine; training
problems are kept as uncontrived,as "live, It as the classroom
situation permits; and the best substantive capabilities in all
Agency components are called upon to contribute to classes and
seminars. Most Intelligence School instructors have had non-
Agency experience in teaching at the college level, and all
instructors must have had some years of Agency experience in
a production or support activity outside the Office of Training.
It would be impossible, of course, to sustain the currency
and reality of Intelligence School training without the full
cooperation of the producing, operating, and supporting components
of the Agency. The fact that we are getting that cooperation is
clearly indicative of the Agency's belief in the importance of the
training mission.
The variety of instructional services for which the Intelligence
School is responsible is manifest in the following descriptions,
which.are largely in the words of the instructors themselves. It
should be emphasized that though most of the courses are scheduled
on a regular basis, many of these can be run in response to a
specific request and can be tailored for the needs of specific
offices.
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The Intelligence Production
Faculty (IPF) is oriented perhaps
more specifically toward the Directorate
of Intelligence than toward any other part of CIA. Yet it offers
instruction in some of the basic skills useful to professionals in
every component of the Agency. All CIA professionals need adept-
ness in intelligence writing, in intelligence briefing, and in
conference techniques. Other skills courses, needed primarily
in research offices but also used in offices doing operational
planning, include Intelligence Research Techniques and Map and
Photo Interpretation. Two substantive courses open also to
professionals in all parts of the Agency are the Geography of the
USSR and the Geography of China. These courses are vital to the
intelligence officer concerned with either of the two major targets
of our intelligence effort.
Most of the training provided by the IPF is for Career Trainees
(CTs). The CT courses include the skills taught to non-CTs--
writing, briefing, analysis, map reading, photo interpretation. In
addition, these courses acquaint the CTs with the work of the
Directorate of Intelligence and in some parts of the Directorate of
Science and Technology, and provide practice in the analytical and
operational techniques of these directorates, especially those related
to research and to certain types of collection.
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The IPF also gives support to training outside its own courses.
Individual lectures are given in courses conducted by other OTR
faculties and in courses offered in other agencies. Members of
the faculty participate in the briefing of foreign intelligence officers,
especially on methods of producing finished intelligence.
EFFECTIVE
SPEA KI
Federal prose (not to be mistaken for English) shuns the active
voice. It transmutes strong verbs into cumbersome nouns; adverbs
into prepositional phrases; and nouns, adjectives. In the world of
the federal prose writer, emphasis becomes redundancy, facts
become abstractions, formality becomes pomposity. Or, to use
a recent example, "Christmas services" become "appropriate
religious services in keeping with the spirit of the Christmas
season. "
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Two 26-hour courses in "de-pomping, " listed in the OTR Catalog
as Basic and Intermediate Writing Workshops, run several times
yearly. The basic course welcomes anyone who writes and is
dissatisfied with the results. Diction, sentence structure, punctua-
tion, paragraph development are treated as needed. The Intermediate
Workshop takes those who have had the basic course or who have
passed an English grammar pretest (which the Assessment and
Evaluation Staff of the Office of Medical Services gives once a month.)
Here, discussion focuses on the logic, organization, unity, emphasis,
and coherence of the finished paper. In both courses the student
spends about half the class time criticizing and revising papers
written in the preceding session and discussing related principles
of writing, and he spends the other half in putting those principles
into practice. In both, the grand goal is, simply, clarity.
Those who cannot leave their desks twice a week can take these
courses by correspondence. Occasionally, special workshops
are arranged for particular Agency components, and the course is
based on materials peculiar to that office; occasionally, also,
short segments of writing training can be fitted into the training
programs of other offices.
Parallel with written communication is oral communication.
Any number of situations arise during the ordinary conduct of
Agency business wherein communication to or through groups or
individuals on a personal basis is desirable. Courses in Effective
Speaking, Briefing Techniques, and Conference Techniques give
Agency employees an opportunity to improve their oral communication
skills. Currently, the classes meet once a week for twelve two-hour
sessions. Student presentations are constructively criticized
both by the instructor and by the class. Tape recordings assist
in further self-study and analysis. Special instruction is given
in the selection and use of graphic aids.
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TELLIGENCE RESEAR
LHIVIWUelb
The Intelligence Research Techniques Course is intended for
any professional who does research and analysis in CIA, and
for those, such as librarians, whose main job it is to support
analysts. The course is usually a specialized presentation
tailored to meet the specific needs of analysts in a particular
office. For example, the course has been given numerous
times for analysts from the Office of Scientific Intelligence, in
versions ranging in length from four to twelve weeks, full time.
It has also been given three times for analysts, librarians, and
indexers in NPIC's Collateral Support Division as a two-week full-
time course. A five-week version was given to analysts in the
research branch of a foreign intelligence service. On the other
hand, the course is occasionally open to analysts from all parts of
the Agency simultaneously.
Usually students bring from their job a research project on
which they work during the course, going through all the steps in
the research process: planning a project (writing terms of reference
and a project schedule), using Agency repositories of information,
assembling information from the in-box, using analyst files, using
collection programs, analyzing, and writing finished intelligence
reports. At each step students read a volume of the special seven-
part text prepared for this course. In most versions of the course,
students are given instruction in intelligence writing to point out
their major writing problems and to help them overcome these problems.
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During the course, students visit libraries, registers, research
offices, and other areas in and outside the Agency, within security
limitations, where their project would naturally lead them. In
these offices they hear briefings and see the operation of collection,
filing, and dissemination systems, and learn at first hand what
resources are available to them as researchers.
Because this course usually runs only about four weeks, students
are seldom able to complete their research projects. At the end
of the course, therefore, they write a progress report on their
project, reviewing the information they have already found, noting
the major gaps in their information, and outlining the measures
they plan to take after the course to fill these gaps.
Have you ever had to pull a map from your safe drawer, spread
it out on your desk, locate (from coordinates given it an intelligence
information report) a Buddhist temple and a railroad bridge,
and measure (with your trusty wooden ruler) how far apart they
are? After you did this, did you straighten up and announce,
"The bridge is 3 3/4 miles northeast of the temple with no
settlements anywhere nearby. It should be easy to reach"? How
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did you feel about the conclusions you drew from the map? Confident?
Pretty pleased with yourself? Did you notice that the trail went
only about one-third of the way, that a ravine had to be crossed
and that the last part was across rice paddies? Did you notice
that the map scale was in kilometers (3 3/4 kilometers is
approximately 2. 3 miles)? If any doubt lingered in your mind
about whether you'd figured it right (or whether that young
analyst who works for you had it right), maybe you or he should
sign up for the Intelligence Research - Map and Photo Interpretation -
Course.
Does a handful of aerial photographs leave you impressed but
frankly bewildered as to what to do with them. Here again, the
Map and PI course, packed into seven full days, can help.
The aim of this course is to develop the ability to fully exploit
maps used in intelligence and to perform simple photo interpretation
tasks, using relatively simple and readily available field and office
equipment. During the course the students also develop an awareness
of the limitations of these methods and this equipment, especially
in photo interpretation, and learn where and how to get Agency
support when needed. Thus, this course teaches do-it-yourself
methods, and it stresses recognition of the moment at which to
call in a professional.
Classes are a mixture of lectures, demonstrations, and practical
exercises, of which the high point - - literally as well as figuratively
-- is a 1, 000-mile flight during which students photograph
designated targets and identify objects from the air.
The Map and Photo Interpretation course is available on
request. Enrollment is limited to fifteen students. Every
effort is made to schedule this course at a time that is convenient.
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the Whether you are a desk anal
orator himself, analyst,
the P' a Planner of o
of thse ha course in the operations, or
o huge
of the USSR is and vital countries can be geography Y of one ? both
day
a very intensive useful to e everyday for a course usu You. Geography
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After brief g a bearing on area
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training in Russian knowledge of the USSR is ssian-language atlas transliteration,
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ta
course one ca as one of their chief the students use
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gent country in the Woridcomprehensive area
knowledge ledge
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The approach and he
en geography of -China is still
geography, but will
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?~y about half as lonf the wc ill
Communist China and, se on Soviet
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the M?ngolian Peoples
24
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::INTELLIGENCE TECHNIQUES COURSE
The three-week
Intelligence Techniques Course
is part of the early headquarters
training given to all CTs. For many
future case officers it is the only taste of life
in the Directorate of Intelligence and the only exposure to the work
done there. The faculty instructs in skills which the student will
find useful throughout his career, wherever he may work, and it
tries to give the student and the Agency some basis for making a
rational decision concerning the direction his career will take.
The skills emphasized in the course are those of communication
and analysis. The communication skills, writing and oral briefing,
are heavily stressed, both because of their Agency-wide importance
and because this may be the only time during his training when the
CT will receive formal guidance in them. Four oral briefings (on
current, scientific, and geographic intelligence, and a final ten-
minute presentation) enable most students to develop a degree of
platform presence, to free themselves of distracting mannerisms,
to think on their feet. The ten written exercises are criticized and
graded for writing as well as for analysis.
Problems the CTs are asked to solve during the course require
the application of the varied analytical techniques in use in the
analysis offices of the Directorate of Intelligence. Students use
qualitative and estimative analysis in exercises such as the currentl
used Analysis Exercise,
Both approaches apply to the Economic
anda Analysis paper.
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INTELLIGENCE PRODUCTION
The nine-week Intelligence Production Course is designed for
CTs who have been selected to make their careers in the Directorate
of Intelligence. Its aims are closely related: To show CTs in a
concrete way how the work in each component supports and is
supported by every other partof the Directorate; to give represent-
atives of the Directorate's offices a chance to observe and evaluate
the caliber of prospective employees; and to give the Career Training
Program Staff, and the CTs themselves, an appreciation of each
individual's potential for filling specific assignments in the Directorate.
The course is an exploration of the problems of producing finished
intelligence and of the other major activities of the Directorate of
Intelligence -- collection, dissemination, and storing and retrieving
information in whatever form. It combines problem solving with
at-the-desk discussion with working analysts. It includes panel
discussions, tours, and briefings. All components of the Directorate
are eventually visited. A seminar or discussion by a faculty member
precedes each visit. During the visits the students have an opportunity
to meet senior officers and key personnel. The student prepares
a written report or participates in an oral discussion reviewing
almost every visit. The CTs also study and visit offices outside
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the Directorate of Intelligence whose work frequently is closely
related to or requires heavy support from thatDirectorate. In
this category are the Joint Operations Intelligence Center, the
Board of National Estimates, and the Office of Scientific Intelligence.
In a further effort to gain a working knowledge of the functions
of the Directorate of Intelligence, the CTs spend about two weeks
preparing a research paper. These papers deal with intelligence
methods, procedures, and problems rather than with substantive
matters. Some examples of research titles in a recent class were:
"Legal Traveler Reporting on Scientific and Technological Research
and Development in the Soviet Union, " "Support of Counterinsurgency
Planning by the Directorate of Intelligence, " "White House Staff
Requirements for Intelligence Support from the Directorate of
Intelligence. "
Because of the lack of published material on the subjects involved,
the CTs can obtain information only by interviewing professionals
in CIA. In this way, the CTs are forced to make many contacts
with officers in the Directorate of Intelligence and sometimes in
other directorates. Occasionally, the results of these research
papers have appeared as articles in Studies in Intelligence.
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D
&IIIEM
IOC
The Orientation and Briefing Faculty (OBF) accomplishes its
mission in two basic ways: providing briefings and conducting
courses. The briefing function is distinctive in that it is not
only, or even primarily, directed inward toward Agency personnel,
but outward toward non-CIA audiences. OBF courses vary from
the basic, through intermediate, to advanced seminars. None
of the courses teaches skills; all involve dialogue and are con-
cerned with insight, understanding, and perspective. The
following articles, contributed by OBF members themselves,
give something of the flavor and scope of both the briefing
function and the principal courses.
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Throughout the years there has been a continuing demand for
briefings on CIA and the intelligence community. Except for
selected occasions when senior Agency officials are involved,
OTR, and specifically the OBF, is responsible for providing the
briefings. The number of briefings has grown from some 75 in
1955 to approximately 300 in 1966.
A briefing, as the term implies, is short; It may vary from a
few minutes to most of a day, but it averages about two hours.
Special emphasis is given to adapting every presentation to the
needs and interests of the particular audience, and since the
circumstances of each briefing are different -- audience compo-
sition, time available, security limitations, depth of coverage --
each briefing is different.
Within CIA, briefings for two grqups of personnel have become
standard. All individuals entering on duty are provided with an
introduction to CIA and its mission. Similarly, professionals
returning from overseas assignment attend sessions at which they
are brought up to date on organizational developments and security
matters.
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Briefings for non-CIA audiences often assume a public relations
dimension, because, through them, the Agency image is brought
into focus. U. S. Government groups make up the largest element
among outsiders to whom OBF directs its attention. Staff members
regularly appear in a number of training courses at the Department
of State, USIA, AID, DIA, NSA, and the Military Assistance Institute,
and at Army, Navy, and Air Force installations throughout the
country. Briefings are given also to dependents of Agency employees,
to business groups, and to university groups. A prize OBF assign-
ment is the briefing of senior officials of the United States or foreign
countries. The briefing of the foreign official, given at the request
of the Clandestine Services, is generally part of an introductory
visit to the Agency.
INTELLIGENCE REVIEWCOURSE
The Intelligence Review Course is given twice a year for professionals
at middle and senior levels all over CIA. It gives a picture - -
concrete, specific, and up-to-date -- of the U. S. Intelligence
Community, and especially of the Agency itself. It offers appraisals
of major international trends affecting intelligence; surveys changes
in and problems facing the intelligence community; describes recent
and possible future changes in Agency organization; identifies some
of the major problems of collection, production, coordination and
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support of intelligence; and tries to provide a glimpse into the future of
the U. S. intelligence effort.
The course attempts to overcome a common problem of the CIA
professional -- the narrowing of interest and direction which over-
takes him as he becomes increasingly immersed in the demands
of his immediate work. Its content has been selected to broaden
his view of the intelligence world and to increase his appreciation
of the problems and achievements of his fellow workers. Guest
speakers from the Office of the Director and from each of the four
Directorates explain the significant developments and problems of
their components. In addition, senior officers from other depart-
ments and agencies of the government describe national security
and foreign policy issues and their requirements for intelligence
support.
In the most recent course, the Special Assistant to Ambassador
Averill Harriman and the Dean of the School of Professional Studies
of the Foreign Service Institute of the Department of State spoke on
the relationship and importance of intelligence to U. S. foreign
policy needs. A senior State Department intelligence officer and
the Assistant Chief of Staff, Plans and Programs, of the Defense
Intelligence Agency described the intelligence activities in these two
departments. The list of Agency speakers included the Executive
Director-Comptroller, the General Counsel, the Chairman of the
Board of National Estimates, the Assistant Deputy for National
Intelligence Programs Evaluation, a Deputy Director, an acting
Deputy Director, an Assistant Deputy Director, and fifteen Directors
or Chiefs in the four Directorates.
Complementing the formal presentations are group presentations
by the students themselves. Since the class contains representatives
from all components of the Agency, and each component is represented
so far as possible in each seminar, the individual students are
constantly exposed to the work and thought of components other
than their own. The Directorate of Intelligence analyst comes to
realize the point of view of the Clandestine Services operations
officer and vice versa, and both become conversant with the
procedures and trials of the finance or logistics officer in rendering
his support. And finally, all are exposed to the esoteric world of
science and technology.
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INTRODUCTION TO INTE
LIGENCE
Introduction to Intelligence is the intelligence segment of the
Intelligence Orientation Course, which, under one name or
another, has run without interruption since the early days of the
Agency. All professional employees of CIA -- except for Career
Trainees who have their own version of it -- are now required to
take this course after they have entered on duty, and it is a
prerequisite for many other courses given by OTR. A two-week
course, currently scheduled ten times a year, it introduces the
student briefly to the national security structure and the intelligence
community; gives him a comprehensive picture of the mission,
organization, and functions of the Agency; alerts him to current
problems of interest to intelligence officers in different parts of
the world; and provides him with an opportunity to examine his
knowledge of his American heritage and to voice his opinions on
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different aspects of the United States, both as a private individual
in a seminar and as a representative of the U. S. Government in
a simulated interview with a person from another culture.
The course is designed for new employees but regularly attracts
about one-tenth of its enrollment from experienced Agency
professionals, particularly those whose jobs have been of such
an esoteric nature that they have been outside the mainstream of
Agency activity. Classes include persons of differing ages and
grades from all directorates of the Agency. During the past year,
for example, the ages of the students ranged from 21 to 54, and
the grades from GS-6 to GS-15.
As its name implies, the course seeks to introduce the student
to intelligence and to show him where he stands in relation to his
own component, to other components in the Agency, to the Agency
as a whole, to the intelligence structure of the U. S. Government,
and, in some part, to the entire Executive Branch of the U. S.
Government. The purpose is both motivational and practical: It
pictures the student as a part of a process and an organization doing
work of unique importance and influence; it acquaints the student
with the other components of the intelligence structure (in the
Agency particularly) so that he may know to whom to go when
confronted with an intelligence problem.
Generally speaking, the OBF staff speaks on the extra-Agency
subjects, such as the organization for national security and the
intelligence community, and on the overall organization of the
Agency. This sets the stage for lecturers from different areas of
the Agency to speak on their own components -- on the work that
each does and how this work ties in with the overall mission of
CIA. Guest speakers from the Directorate of Intelligence lead
off, followed by those from the Directorate of Science and
Technology, the Clandestine Services, and the Support Services,
in that order.
Developed throughout the course are two other themes: a
survey of conditions of interest in differing areas of the World;
and the American Thesis program. The survey gives the class
an up-to-date picture of critical events abroad, together with the
background of these events and their importance to the United States.
Since these are presented by senior officials thoroughly familiar
with their areas, they give a picture of the world not as seen
through the eyes of a historian or a commentator but through the
eyes of an intelligence officer.
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The American Thesis program seeks to emphasize to the students
that the more they know of their own country and the better they
can articulate whay they know, especially in dealing with foreigners,
the more effective they will be in this or any other agency dealing
with foreign affairs.
The faculty attempts to "re-interest" the students in what they
have already been exposed to in a greater or lesser degree during
their school and college years -- the fundamentals of American
beliefs, American history, and the role of the United States in
today's world. It is hoped that the students will begin to clarify
in their own minds what ideals the United States stands for and
why it stands for them. To this end, the students are involved in
a series of three exercises. At the beginning of the course the
members of the class individually list and jointly discuss American
values; later, in a seminar, the students, separated into small
teams, present for discussion aspects of a topic on which they
have done some research; and, finally, the students answer
questions about the United States which are posed to their teams
by an instructor playing the role of a person from another culture.
Instruction is primarly through lectures, but these are
supplemented both by reading material and films. Staff papers,
which have been periodically updated, and examples of intelligence
which the Agency produces support the presentations of each
directorate. A reading kit and a library of Americana complement
the exercises making up the American Thesis program. Films
introduce many of the lectures and augment the development of
the area studies and the American Thesis theme.
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ORIENTATION TO INTELLIGENCE (for CT's)
The objective of this course is to familiarize the Career
Trainee with intelligence and intelligence organization and with
national security and national security organization. To this end,
the course examines terminology and concepts, history and theory,
structure and dynamics, function and purpose. The main thrust
of the course is aimed at understanding the mission, functions,
and organization of CIA, but a context is provided to give breadth
to the treatment. CIA is presented as a part of the intelligence
community, the intelligence community as a part of the foreign
affairs community, the foreign affairs community as a part of the
national security family, and the national security family as a
part of the Government of the United States. Intelligence briefings
are also given on selected foreign areas to bring the whole into
focus with the world problems faced by the United States today.
The Orientation to Intelligence Course differs from the
Introduction to Intelligence Course in that the Orientation to
Intelligence Course gives a more detailed picture of the non-
Agency intelligence community, emphasizing policy and decision-
making functions in the foreign affairs area, and does not include
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the American Thesis program. As presently constituted, the course
lasts for two weeks and is presented three times a year. It uses
the lecture method supplemented by readings, films, seminars,
and review devices. Most of the presentations are given by speakers
from the several Agency components, supplemented by OBF staff
members and outside guest speakers. At the end of the course
the students are rated on their performance in a written examination.
VIETNAM ORIENTATION
"I 'm going to Saigon, but I don't know anything about the place.
What clothes do I take? Do I need any furniture? Will my wife
and children accompany me? Is it safe? And the situation out
there 1 What is MACV, ARVIN and RDC? And who are the Hoa
Hao, the Cao Dai, and the Dai Viet? As a matter of fact, am I
pronouncing these names correctly? Needless to say, I can't
spell them. I just don't know anything about Vietnam. Where do
I begin? "
Imagine not one, but ten, twenty, thirty, and even occasionally
forty persons parading through your office each month with these
and a hundred other such questions and comments pouring out of
their mouths. Better still, imagine yourself at the Saigon airport
-- the name is Tan Son Nhut -- meeting these questioners as they
come tumbling out of the plane. Now you have the historical
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background to the Far East Division's decision to economize on
time and energy by giving a formal program of instruction on
Vietnam to all Saigon-bound personnel.
In collaboration with FE, OTR now gives, once a month, as it
has since November 1965, a full week of lectures, films,
discussions with returnees from Saigon, and recommended
readings to all those persons currently preparing for departure
to Saigon. The lectures stress, in particular, four main themes:
the background of the struggle in Vietnam; the nature, the
strategy, and the tactics of the communist insurgents; the
response of the governments of South Vietnam and the United
States; and finally, the structure, operations, and problems of
our own Agency in Vietnam.
A fifth theme, a personal one, permeates the whole week,
inasmuch as the students are given every opportunity to ask the
speakers any question, personal or occupational, relevant to
their assignment. So many are these questions that the final
afternoon of the program is devoted to lectures and discussions
on health, insurance, travel, processing, clothing, and related
subjects. Just to make certain that everything that can be
covered this side of the Pacific is covered, the program concludes
with a four-man "Panel on Hitherto Unanswered Questions. "
The Orientation clearly simplifies FE's problem of preparing
people for Saigon, and the fact that they are "less green" than
might otherwise have been the case makes it easier for Saigon
to assimilate the new personnel. From the point of view of the
people themselves, the Orientation provides an excellent
opportunity to meet as a group and discuss common problems,
opportunities, and the future, and also to do this against the
background of information and experiences furnished by Saigon
veterans.
The Far East Division of the CS handles registration initially
for most people, and new personnel are scheduled for this
Orientation as soon as it is convenient for them. Reading
materials are made available before the beginning of the course.
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NON-AGENCY TRAINING
This section of the OTR Bulletin contains information on
non-QA courses or programs related to career develop-
ment of CIA employees. Attendance may be sponsored by
the Agency or it may be self-sponsored. The Training Of-
ficer must be consulted on Agency-sponsored training.
Agency Sponsorship:
A Form 136, "Request for Training at Non-Agency
Facility" (revised effective June 1966), is sent to
the Registrar's office, External Training Branch,
by the Training Officer. For overt employees, the
completed form is sent directly to ETB. For non-
overt applicants, the form is sent first to DDP/OPSER/
CCS. No formal steps toward registration should be
taken prior to OTR approval.
Self- sponsorship:
According t ara c(12), an employee who
takes a non-Agency course at his own expense is re-
quired to send a written request for approval through
administrative channels to the Director of Security.
The request will include the subject(s) to be studied,
the name and address of the school, the full name(s)
of the instructor(s), and the dates and hours of in-
struction.
For additional information on the courses outlined in this sec-
tion of the OTR Bulletin or on other external courses, call AIB/
RS/TR, extensioNEELZU information on registration, call
ETB/RS/TR, extension
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INTERAGENCY TRAINING PROGRAMS
Civil Service Commission
EXECUTIVE SEMINAR IN ADP
23 - 24 March 1900 E Street, N. W.
This two-day seminar provides an opportunity to obtain information,
develop ideas, and exchange views on effective uses of ADP.
Topics focus on matters of concern to top management: Capabilities
of electronic data processing equipment; feasibility studies;
implementing the decision to automate; effects of electronic data
processing systems on organizational structure and various levels
of management; present ADP applications and their results in
terms of efficiency, effectiveness, and economy; the impact of
ADP on the workforce; and the future of ADP in government
management. For executives, GS- 15 or above, with broad
responsibility for functions which are or soon may be automated.
Cost: $75.
ADVANCED SYSTEMS TECHNOLOGY FOR ADP SYSTEMS ANALYSTS
3 - 7 April 1900 E Street, N. W.
For digital computer systems analysts. Provides information on
the latest developments in computer technology on systems
analysis: Implications of the newest multiuse computers for
the systems analyst; methodology for redesigning, modifying,
and expanding existing systems; machine compatibility and
conversion problems; total systems concepts. Cost: $150.
IDEAS AND AUTHORS -- PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT
4 April - 17 May
This series of four six-hour sessions scheduled two weeks apart
enables Federal personnel officers to examine systematically
some of the new and significant ideas and developments affecting
the broad field of personnel. Authors of recent studies in the field
join guest critics and the participants in the program in a discussion
of the books and an exchange of ideas on the subject through an
extended question-and-answer period. For managers at the
GS- 13 level and above who are concerned with personnel
management. Cost: $100.
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Civil Service Commission (coot)
FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT FOR OPERATING EXECUTIVES
I - 3 March 1900 E Street, N. W.
This two-day program puts financial management in perspective
with regard to the development of sound plans for operations, the
development of cost consciousness, evaluating the effectiveness
of spending programs, and integrating budgeting, accounting,
reporting, and auditing with other management tools. The
institute is designed for officials with responsibility for fiscal
matters but who are not primarily concerned with financial
administration. For GS-14 or above. Cost: $60.
INTRODUCTION TO PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT
6 - 10 March 1900 E Street, N. W.
This program offers an integrated and systemized introduction
to the total personnel function for persons just entering the field.
Special emphasis is placed on the interrelationships of the specialty
areas and their relationships to the total field of personnel manage-
ment and total management. Topics include: Defining and analyzing
the role and place of personnel management; identifying and discussing
the objectives and content of major personnel functional areas and
their interrelationships; isolating special skills and knowledge re-
quired for success in the field of personnel management; the role
of the behavioral sciences in the development of the personnel
management field; current trends and developments in the field of
personnel management. For personnel in-grades GS-5 through 9
who are beginning careers in the field of personnel management.
Cost: $55.
INSTITUTE IN CIVIL RIGHTS
27 - 31 March; 8 - 12 May 1900 E Street, N. W.
This institute explores the Civil Rights problem in America,
focusing particularly upon the various considerations which
are appropriate to the administration and implementation of
recent Federal civil rights enactments. The historical and legal
as well as sociopsychological aspects of the civil rights issue
are considered in terms of the concrete and practical realities
of administration and implementation. Participation will be
open to executives, GS- 1-4 or above, particularly those whose
responsibilities in administering agency programs might require
them to have greater knowledge of recent civil rights legislation.
Cost: $150.
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Civil Service Commission (cont)
ECONOMIC ANALYSIS AND EXECUTIVE DECISIONS
17 - 21 April 1900 E Street, N. W.
The purpose of this program is to develop a greater awareness
on the part of Federal executives of the economic impact of
their program decisions. Topics will include the application
of economic analysis to agency problems, the rationale and
consequences of Federal expenditure decisions, recent fiscal
and monetary policies and practices, the allocation of resources
between public and private programs, the application of cost-
benefit analysis to defense and nondefense programs, measure-
ment of productivity in Federal agencies, economic analysis in
the budgetary process, mechanisms for change. For GS- 14 and
above. Cost: $150.
EXECUTIVE SEMINAR IN INTERAGENCY MANAGEMENT
INFORMATION SYSTEMS
20 - 21 April 1900 E Street, N. W.
A two-day seminar focusing on means of speeding the development
of compatible systems for effective information flow for commu-
nities of agencies -- the research and development community,
the foreign affairs community, the economic opportunity community.
The major problems inherent in the coordination of information
handling practices are examined. For GS- 15 and above. Cost:
$75.
EXECUTIVE WORKSHOP IN ADP SYSTEMS ANALYSIS
26 - 28 April 1900 E Street, N. W.
Participants will learn by practice how a systems analyst handles
the design of a computer application from the first step of problem
definition through the phases of project scheduling, systems analysis,
systems design, program design, program production, development
of man/machine interfaces, systems testing, and systems implemen-
tation. Prior attendance at an Executive Seminar in ADP or equivalent
knowledge, although not absolutely essential, will be helpful. For
executives GS- 15 or above, who want and need to have a fuller
understanding of the basic concepts and techniques of digital computer
systems analysis. Cost: $135.
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Department of Health, Education, and Welfare
The Environmental Health Sciences and Engineering Training
Program of the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare
has published a catalog of short-term technical courses and
dates on which they will be given. Among the courses briefly
described are:
Analysis of Atmospheric Inorganics
6 - 10 March (one-week)
13 - 24 March (two-weeks)
Heat Stresa --Evaluation and Control
13 - 17 March
Chemical Analysis of Environmental Radionuclides
3 - 14 April
Basic Radiological Health
3 - 14 April
Meteorological Aspects of Air Pollution
24 - 28 April
Information on these and similar courses may be obtained from
the Registrar's office, extension-
Foreign Service Institute
COMMUNIST CHINA AREA SURVEY
10 - 21 April 1400 Key Boulevard, Rosslyn
This special program is to equip officers responsible for actions
in or related to the area of Communist China to become
familiar with political, military, social, and other factors
which they must consider in fulfilling their responsibilities.
A full-time course, it meets from 9 a. m. to 5:30 p. m. daily.
Cost: $215.
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MIDDLE
MANAGEMENT
INSTITUTE
MANAGEMENT
DEVELOPMENT
PROGRAM
FOR
FEDERAL
EXECUTIVE S
The Civil Service Commission's Middle
Management Institute is directed to the man-
ager's need for a broad perspective and his
requirement to be currently informed on new
developments affecting his type of work. Core
topics focus on the functions of management
such as decision-making, communicating,
planning, directing, controlling, organizing,
and staffing. Discussion will extend also to
planning-programming-budgeting systems,
intergovernmental relations, and the role of
Bureau of the Budget. This program is for
middle managers in grades GS-11 through
GS-14. The next dates are 10 - 14 April,
and the TSB must have nominations by 3
March.
The Management Development Program for
Federal Executives of The Graduate School
of the U. S. Department of Agriculture is
designed to help the executive examine the
managerial aspects of his job, formulate for
himself a framework of managerial theory,
explore ways to improve managerial practice
in the day-to-day work situation, strengthen
his problem-solving and team-action skills,
and formulate a continuing and systematic
program of self-development in management.
The program is conducted in three phases over
a period of several months: a two-day diagnostic
and planning meeting in Washington; a nine- day
workshop at Williamsburg, Virginia; and a final
two-day follow-up evaluation session in Washington.
Generally for persons at the GS- 14 and GS- 15
level, GS-13 managers are also considered.
Nominations for the 32nd program, a special
running, must be in the hands of the Training
Selection Board by 17 March.
The dates: Phase I 25 - 26 May
Phase II 13 - 22 September
Phase III 16 - 17 November
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DEFENSE The Institute for Defense Analysis, in cooperation
SYSTEMS with the University of Maryland, offers an academic
ANALYSIS program to equip Federal employees to become
EDUCATION systems analysts or to apply analytical methods
PROGRAM in major planning processes. The intention is
to develop in the participant an understanding
of the concept of approaching problems from
an economic, analytical frame of reference
which can produce alternative courses of action
for planning purposes. Mathematics and
economics are combined with political science
and government administration to develop an
understanding of the role, the basic techniques,
and the limitations of systems analysis. The
program is oriented toward Department of
Defense personnel, but CIA has been invited
to participate. A nominee must have a
bachelor's degree, and a reasonably strong
educational foundation in both economics
and mathematics is helpful, though not essential;
he should be between thirty and forty and in
grade GS- 12 or higher. The TSB must have
nominations by 24 March.
GRADUATE SCHOOL, CRITICAL ISSUES AND DECISIONS: A SEMINAR
USDA FOR FEDERAL EXECUTIVES
28 March - 10 May Department of Agriculture
This program provides an opportunity for
executives to sit with a small group of their
counterparts from many Federal agencies, and,
under the personal tutelage of leading writers
and scholars, become acquainted with critical
issues. Objectives are to stimulate a more
critical evaluation of the problems which confront
government, to develop more incisive and
analytical techniques in policy and decision-making,
to cultivate a broader base of knowledge and
understanding from which to formulate policieg
and decisions, and to stimulate a systematic
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program of continuing self-development. Henry
Steele Commager, Martin Luther King, Max
Lerner, Leon H. Keyserling, Max Kaplan,
Roger L. Stevens, and James C. Bostain are
scheduled to participate. For GS- 14 and above.
Cost: $235.
All sessions except the first, on 28 March,
are for two hours either from 10 a. m. to noon
or from 1:30 to 3: 30 p. m. On 28 March, the
session is a full day, from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30
p. m. The dates of other sessions are:
4, 5, 11, 12, 18, 19, 25 and 26
April and 3, 4, 9 and 10 May.
The Graduate School of the U. S. Department
of Agriculture has inaugurated a new Curriculum
of Computer Sciences, the classes generally
running from 8 a. m. to noon, on Saturdays for
Section I and on Tuesdays for Section II, over
ten-week periods corresponding roughly to
college or university academic semesters.
Although admission to courses beginning 18
February (Section I) or 21 February (Section II)
can now be accomplished, if at all, on a late
registration basis only, the Fall courses will
begin 30 September and 3 October. Representative
of the courses offered are:
Basic Concepts of Data Processing
Punch Card Data Processing
ADP Orientation for Secretaries and Clerks
ADP Systems Analysis and Design
ADP Systems Design Workshop
Source Data Automation
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ADP Information Retrieval
ADP Budget and Finance Applications
Teleprocessing and Data Communication
Systems
Planning, Programming, and Budgeting
Systems
ADP Documentation and Writing
ADP for Executives
ADP for Executives and Administrators
Human Factors in Data Processing
Introduction to Operations Research
Linear Programming
ADP Transportation Applications
Statistical Methods for Research Workers
Computer Solution of Statistical Analysis
Programs
ADP Engineering Applications
Costing Computer Operations
Data Processing Management
Seminar in ADP Management
Federal Contracting for ADP Software Products
ADP Medical Applications
Course fees range from $60 to $120. Information
on content may be had by calling the OTR
Registrar's office, extension-
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CORRESPONDENCE The Defense Intelligence School offers a Non-
COURSE. I N resident Course in Intelligence designed to
INTELLIGENCE provide a comprehensive background in all
aspects of intelligence, encompassing the
principles of intelligence, international relations,
Sino-Soviet affairs, and unconventional war-
fare. This correspondence course is com-
mensurate with the depth of coverage attained
in the School's Defense Intelligence Course.
Most students complete the course within 15
to 25 months. The course is specifically open
to active and reserve military personnel and
Department of Defense civilians. However,
a limited number of selected Agency personnel
may participate. Applications must be submitted
through the OTR Registrar, who will certify
that the applicant has the necessary clearances
and adequate storage facilities for the classified
course materials. For further information, call
extension
TRANSPORTATION The Nineteenth Institute on Logistics and Traffic
INSTITUTES Management, sponsored by the School of
Business Administration, American University,
will be held 6 - 17 March 1967. The theme
will be: "New Concepts, Systems, and
Technology for Improved Distribution Systems.
The fee for the two-week program is $300.
Other transportation institutes tentatively
scheduled are:
2d Motor Carrier Executive Development
Conference -- 15 - 19 May 1967
21st Air Transport Management
Institute -- 16 - 27 October 1967
TELEVISION The USDA Graduate School,in cooperation with
CORRESPONDENCE WETA-TV Channel 26, is repeating the television
COURSE IN correspondence course Success in Supervision.
SUPERVISION Twelve televised lectures are to be presented by
Channel 26 on Tuesdays at 12 noon and repeated
the following Wednesdays at 6:30 p. m. , beginning
on 4 April. Textbooks, a study guide, and course
materials are supplied by the USDA Graduate
School. Fees are $50.
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Directory of Training Officers
O/DCI
7E-07
DDI
2E-52
D DP
3C-Z9
DDS&T
6E-68
DDS
GB-37
trite
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DCI
O/IG
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Inspection Staff
7D-49
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Audit Staff
1201 Key
General Counsel
7D-07
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Cable Secretariat
1A-53
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DDI (cont)
OCI
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OBI
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DCS
902 Key
1004
Key
Administration
GB-37
Communications
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T rainin
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839, 1000 Glebe
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Office of Training
2.7A O/DTR
Director of Training
Deputy Director of Training
SCHOOLS Intelligence
Language Training
Ope rations
International Communism
Support
Career Training Program
Plans and Policy
Registrar
Deputy Registrar
Adm, Info, Records
External Training
Support
INSTRUCTIONAL
SYSTEMS STUDY
GROUP Coordinator
Rm 819, Glebe
Rm 819, Glebe
Rrn 711, Glebe
2107 Washington Bldg
Annex, Arl Towers
Rm 620, Glebe
Rm 639, Glebe
Rm 632, Glebe
Rm 743, Glebe
Rm 807, Glebe
Rm 839, Glebe
Rm 839, Glebe
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