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Encyclopedia > Army Officer Selection Board

The Army Officer Selection Board [1] at Leighton House, Westbury in Wiltshire, England, runs selection courses which must be passed before being offered a place at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst. Eight discrete boards are run for entry into the various Arms and Services of the Regular and Reserve Army. Westbury is a town and civil parish in the west of the English county of Wiltshire. ... Wiltshire (abbreviated Wilts) is a large southern English county. ... Motto: (French for God and my right) Anthem: Multiple unofficial anthems Capital London Largest city London Official language(s) English (de facto) Unification    - by Athelstan AD 927  Area    - Total 130,395 km² (1st in UK)   50,346 sq mi  Population    - 2005 est. ... New College, Royal Military Academy Sandhurst New Colours are presented to RMAS, June 2005. ...

Contents

AOSB (Regular) Briefing

This is a two day course which must be passed before proceeding to the main AOSB. It is a relatively easy course intended to give potential officers an idea of what is required and expected on the main board.


Before leaving the AOSB Briefing, candidates are assigned one of four possible categories:

  1. Allowed to proceed to the main board as soon as desired.
  2. Required to delay for between six and twenty four months (often awarded to younger candidates with potential ability but insufficient maturity)
  3. The candidate is considered unsuitable on the basis of their showing at the briefing and it is considered highly unlikely that they would be successful at the Main Board. However, they are allowed to attempt the Main Board if, after further consideration, they believe they can achieve the required standard. It is rare, but not unheard of, for Category 3 candidates to be successful at the Main Board.
  4. Rejected entirely, further applications will not be accepted. This is usually only awarded on the basis of an inadequate showing on the standardised mental aptitude tests (the results of which are the only aspect of the briefing to be carried forward to the Main Board).

AOSB (Regular) Main Board

This is a four day course consisting of many different academic, physical, mental and aptitude tests. It is designed to put the candidates under pressure whilst fostering their team spirit and competitiveness.


On arrival, candidates are allocated a number (used instead of one's name) and placed into teams. They remain in these teams for the duration of the board, making it common for strong friendships to develop during the process. As candidates are assessed against a standard and not against each other's performance (there are no set quotas for acceptance - if you meet the standard you pass), it is often found that strong teams will see all members meet the standard.


On the last night of the course a formal dinner is held for the candidates. In the past this was regarded by the candidates as another test, this time of their manners and social skills; it is not clear whether this was ever actually the case. Nowadays, the staff are at pains to point out that the meal is not an assessment, and no directing staff are present at the event.


For obvious reasons, the details of the physical tasks, command tasks, interviews and academic tests are not publicly broadcast.


AOSB (TA) Main Board

This is the course for the selection of TA officers, run over a weekend. The qualities sought are the same as for Regular Service and all the tests are identical, with the exception that the opening race is not held. Since it is done in half the time of the RCB it is considerably more hectic.


Under the Review of Officers Career Courses (Volunteer) an AOSB (TA) Briefing has been introduced and the Territorial Commissioning Boards at Edinburgh and Chilwell have been shut down. All officer selection is now done at Westbury.


Physical fitness requirements

According to the AOSB's websites, the general fitness requirements for both Army and TA officer entrants are as follows: 44 press-ups (males) or 21 press-ups (females) in 2 minutes or less. 50 sit-ups (both genders) in 2 minutes or less. The Beep Test, or MSFT, to level 10.2 (males) and level 8.1 (females) Obstacle course "best effort" measured against the an undefined minimum standard.


External links


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