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    564th AMXS graduates first class of internal vocational training program

    564th AMXS graduates first class of internal vocational training program

    Photo By Paul Shirk | Brooke Selfridge, 564th Aircraft Maintenance Squadron (AMXS) sheet metal helper, shows...... read more read more

    TINKER AFB, OK, UNITED STATES

    05.03.2021

    Story by Paul Shirk 

    72nd Air Base Wing

    The 564th Aircraft Maintenance Squadron recently graduated its first class from its internally developed sheet metal vocational program.
    Established in response to the COVID pandemic, the vocational training program was formed when traditional classroom training for new employees became unavailable.
    “We want this to be a benchmark for what we’re going to do in the future and we expect good things out of you,” said William Baumann, 76th Aircraft Maintenance Group Deputy Director, during the March 5, 2021, graduation ceremony. “Being a professional aircraft maintainer is important work and it demands something from you as well, to maintain that level of excellence as we put these airplanes back together.”
    The 564th AMXS reached out to the Oklahoma City Air Logistics Complex’s Training Office for assistance in building the coursework, but also tailored their class to better meet the needs of those working on the KC-135 Stratotanker aircraft. The resulting class, 18 weeks long, rotates students through different elements.
    “We did six weeks in the vocational shop and six weeks in our inspection dock, teaching them how to look at their airplanes,” said Gordon Anderson, 564th Aircraft Maintenance Squadron production flight chief. “Eight weeks was actually on the aircraft, doing trailing edge panels, smaller jobs, until we release them to the aircraft.”
    The focus on quality from the beginning has contributed to the unit’s Acceptance Inspection Deficiency Report customer deficiency rate falling to a five-year low.
    Bringing the training class onto the shop floor has had a beneficial side effect, eliminating foreign objects and debris, known as FOD.
    “On Friday afternoons, they’ll come down and actually get on the airplane and de-FOD and help clean,” Anderson said. “We’ve used that as a training aid to some of our more senior mechanics…so it’s kind of now turned into a challenge. If the dock crew knows the vo-tech class is coming to their dock on Friday afternoon to inspect the aircraft, it’s driving our senior technicians to be better at what they’re doing.”
    As the world slowly returns to normal, the 564th AMXS is looking to keep the benefits of their program. The 564th AMXS is reaching back to the OC-ALC Training Office to integrate some of the lessons learned into future courses as well as bringing in one of the Training Office’s instructors to the shop floor, preventing the loss of a supervisor who would normally be tasked with teaching duties.
    The 564th is also taking inputs from its students and graduates to make the class more valuable as well as tailoring the content to be valuable to other units on base.

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 05.03.2021
    Date Posted: 05.05.2021 09:57
    Story ID: 395661
    Location: TINKER AFB, OK, US

    Web Views: 56
    Downloads: 0

    PUBLIC DOMAIN