Combat conditioning
Company I is the first recruit training company here to complete the new training regimen, which includes a schedule change in which the Crucible becomes the culminating event of training.
The start of the new year brings with it a new aspect of recruit training, with enhanced core values and combat conditioning program.
In April, Marine Corps Commandant Gen. James T. Conway announced plans to modify recruit training here and at Marine Corps Recruit Depot Parris Island for Marines to focus on rededicating themselves to their core values and warrior ethos.
The Crucible has been moved from week eight to week 11. Conducting the Crucible at week eleven allows recruits to complete the hardest thing they may have ever done, right before earning the title Marine.
The Emblem Ceremony, where recruits receive their eagle, globe and anchor insignia now follows the Crucible at Weapons Field Training Battalion, Camp Pendleton, Calif.
The Crucible is a 54-hour field training event near the end of recruit training that evaluates a recruit�s mental, moral, and physical development in order to validate the transformation into a Marine.
The new training schedule emphasizes core values through values-based training and guided discussions.
Starting the first training week, recruits participated in daily guided discussions with their drill instructors to foster personal, group and organizational values. In an open forum recruits are given ground rules and told what to expect from the discussions, said Gunnery Sgt. Jose H. Molina, Company I chief drill instructor.
A combat conditioning program has been designed to strengthen muscles used in combat and reduces the chance of injury.
Recruits wore flack jackets and helmets and carried weapons on the obstacle course in order to simulate a combat situation, said Molina.
According to Capt. David M. Dalby, assistant training officer, G-3, dynamic warm-ups, mobility and stretching exercises have been added to the program to reduce the chance of injury. Those same exercises have been increased in intensity and lowered in duration.
�Field Week and the Crucible used to be back-to-back,� said Dalby. �The new schedule has them three weeks apart, which is anticipated to mitigate injury.�
A transition week, �Marine Week,� has also been added at the end of recruit training so recruits can gain the ability to make a better transition from the rigidly structured environment of recruit training to a less restrictive one.
In the final eight and a half days of recruit training, drill instructors assume the role of platoon sergeant and continue to teach and mentor. New Marines will be addressed by rank or �Marine.�
Emphasis will be placed on the reinforcing of core values, exercising of small unit leadership, and increasing of individual responsibility.