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madsox
11-05-16, 03:32 PM
<style type="text/css">p.p1 {margin: 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px; font: 14.0px 'Helvetica Neue'; color: #595852; -webkit-text-stroke: #595852}p.p2 {margin: 0.0px 0.0px 10.0px 0.0px; line-height: 21.0px; font: 14.0px 'Helvetica Neue'; color: #595852; -webkit-text-stroke: #595852}span.s1 {font-kerning: none}</style>MARINE CORPS BASE QUANTICO, Va. --
The Marine Corps’ first Force Fitness Instructor (FFI) Course concluded Nov. 4 at Marine Corps Base Quantico, Virginia.
Marine Administration 460/16 was released in September outlining the guidance and end state of the FFI program, which was implemented to improve overall unit fitness and health. Fifty students from across the Marine Corps were selected to participate in the initial five-week course, beginning Oct. 3.
“The FFI course is the Commandant’s answer to fitness for the Marine Corps,” said Gunnery Sgt. Dimyas Perdue, the chief instructor of the FFI Course. “It is designed to help Marines understand fitness in a better way.”
Daily operations during the course include physical training in the morning, followed by classes and practical application for the rest of the day. Students study and avidly practice various fitness practices that test strength, endurance and agility, according to Arron Prowett, the strength and conditioning specialist for the course.
“They will do performance tests, and then we’ll briefly give them a class on not only the framework, but also how to administer, record and score it,” said Prowett. “We test lower body strength, lower body power, agility and anaerobic conditioning to see where they’re at and give insight on how fit or athletic a Marine is.”
The students learn about the seven foundational movements of fitness, which are pull, push, hinge, plank, lunge, squat and rotate. These movements are practiced throughout the course to improve the students’ capabilities and show how it can be practiced, according to Gregg. The course is also designed to augment other existing training programs in the Marine Corps.
“The program is very scalable and inclusive,” said Gregg. “We are not trying to get in the way of what the Marine Corps has all ready done. We wanted something that can leverage all of the resources that we have and apply them for the maximum potential they have for each Marine.”
An FFI is educated on different elements of overall health and fitness for Marines, and that includes nutrition. The course is working to break that mentality that any mix of diet and exercise is beneficial, according to Perdue. The instructors emphasize heavily that “nutrition is key”. They teach how nutrients work in the body, and how it can help Marines better train.
The students also learn the fundamentals of injury prevention measures.
“The course prepares them to take a group of Marines and make them as healthy and injury free as possible while increasing performance,” said Sgt. Adam Gregg, a FFI trainer. “There are a lot of preventive steps that can be done that are not being done.”
The ultimate goal of the program is to send these future FFIs back to the small-unit level to have the most impact.
“It doesn’t matter what [military occupational specialty] you are,” said Perdue. “Your unit is going to have a standardized approach to fitness and an FFI will be able to tailor the unit’s training program. This will change the overall perception of how we conduct fitness.”
Marines that are interested in the program should check to see if they meet the prerequisites according to MARADMIN 460/16 and conduct adequate research before applying to attend the course, Perdue added.
“Students should come with an open mind and soak up the information so they can bring it back to their unit,” said Perdue. “Prepare as if you were going to give your first class for fitness. Start looking at the information for physical fitness, but more importantly, live it.”

madsox
11-05-16, 03:36 PM
I just thought this was a pretty good idea - these will be a secondary MOS, and from what I've heard elsewhere the training is meant to help get smart, modern fitness and PT out across the Corps. Make the Marines train harder and smarter, something more advanced than "daily sevens and a 3-mile run".

Tennessee Top
11-05-16, 04:35 PM
Sounds like a good idea to me too. Good luck getting Marines in the barracks to stop ordering pizza delivery though (while playing their video games).

FoxtrotOscar
11-05-16, 04:59 PM
So what happened to regularly Scheduled PT three times a week, run by platoon Sgts and such...???

Tennessee Top
11-05-16, 06:34 PM
These millennial Marines don't go for that old Corps stuff. Gotta be more high tech like Force Fitness Instructors (FFI's).

MunkyVsRobot
11-06-16, 10:05 AM
I am still 50-50 on this. I believe they are mirroring this off of the British military. Went I went to Scotland for a joint op they have an MOS dedicated to PT.

It really makes sense, a more directed approach to physical training, someone who is actually trained on conditioning and nutrition. Instead of 1st Sgt saying this is whats happening whether you like it or not. I'd say it really helps with modernizing the Marine Corps instead of this is how we have always done it so this is how it will always be done.

In all reality the first time I got any classes on nutrition and "Working out" has been at this MAI course. Not that I dont know how to work out or eat but there is a vast majority of Marines that know nothing of the subject.

FistFu68
11-06-16, 02:32 PM
Can't see where it could hurt with this Generation of Jarheads,cause when it comes too Chit hitting the Fan Your only as Strong as Your Weakest link both mentally and physically ! Godspeed to ya S/F

Kegler300
11-07-16, 07:20 PM
One thing I no longer see on Camp Lejeune are formation runs.