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Non-commissioned officers in ST world

One possible explanation for Tarses is perhaps Star Fleet Command, in its infinite wisdom, dropped all enlisted ranks/titles save for "Crewman" and "Chief". Have we ever heard the words "Petty Officer" anywhere in Star Trek??
 
It doesn't sit in with the rest of ST philosophy.

In what sense does having people choose "command" as a career path whilst others choose "specialist" not sit with ST philosophy, given that everyone has the option of applying to SF academy, everyone has the option of working towards their chosen career goals?

The Federation is FAR from being a genuine utopia, I've argued this several times before and frankly the myth it was ever intended to be gives a quite distorted perception which is often hard to gel with what we see on screen. Not sure this is one of those cases though.

The uses and purposes of traditions and systems are ultimately fluid, a thing having it's roots in a system does not mean it still represents such a system or endorses it.

Modern day military officers still salute, they aren't endorsing a feudal monarchy where knights removed their visor as a form of identification and to establish status.

The House of Commons was to an extent originally planned and structured in such a manner as to reduce the risks associated with sword fights between rival MPs. That structure has been maintained through numerous refurbishments without anyone endorsing the concept of duels of honour.
 
Have we ever heard the words "Petty Officer" anywhere in Star Trek??
O'Brien was twice identified as a "Chief Petty Officer": in Family where Sergei Rozhenko greets him as "a fellow Chief Petty Officer" and in Hippocratic Oath the Jem'Hadar instantly identify O'Brien as a Chief Petty Officer based on his rank insignia on his collar. Although I don't think anyone has ever been referred to as just "Petty Officer" surely the presence of O'Brien being a CPO indicates there are Petty Officers in Starfleet?
 
Anyone can go to Starfleet Academy - or any real life military academy- provided they meet the entry requirements, [...]

This is definitely not the case in the US. Nominations to the service academies (except USCG) are given by members of congress in an opaque process that varies from district to district and can give substantial advantage to those with the right political connections. The USCG Academy alone uses a competitive selection process. But each year there are thousands of students who meet the entry requirements and cannot get a nomination.

And in all maritime services, there is an officer/NCO divide, regardless if it's the Navy, Coast Guard, Cruise Line, or any civilian shipping organization. It's simply the way shit's done. It hasn't been done away with yet in the modern era, why should Star Trek's time be any different?

It hasn't been done away with today, but it has changed very much in the past 200 years. For instance, in the late 1800s, the US Navy had a department responsible for officer personnel, while enlisted personnel were handled by the Bureau of Equipment; they were just parts that made a ship work, like anchor chains or a steam windlass. There was no "school" system for training, nor were any records kept on enlisted personnel above a ship's own books. Petty officers were 10-15% of the enlisted total, now they are over 70%. It's hard for me to believe that today's structure would survive unchanged 200 or 300 years into the future.

I don't think Trek took a particularly "futuristic" approach for its Starfleet personnel structure, basically transposing something like the present day when it bothered to think about enlisted personnel at all. Certainly, naval ships with large crews were originally mostly unskilled labor, pulling ropes, lifting shells, shoveling coal. The trend has been steadily toward fewer numbers and higher skills. A modern USN guided missile destroyer is twice as big as a WW2 destroyer, but has a smaller crew, and the next-generation Zumwalt is larger still, but with less than half the crew of an Arleigh Burke.

But in Trek we have starships with crews of several hundred. Did the trend reverse at some point and a lot of starship jobs open up for kids just out of high school? Doesn't seem likely to me.

So I can see what jonds91 is saying. If you take all the ranks top to bottom, ensign is, say, half-way up. If, as I think more likely, the grades below that are educated, technically qualified and experienced, why does someone get to skip so many steps on the ladder? Especially if they are shown to be green in a lot of ways. Why should an experienced senior person have to defer to them while at the same time trying to educate them? If you were an observer who knew nothing about the traditional system, the arrangement might seem odd.

One answer might still be education. If the petty officers have bachelor degrees, maybe ensigns have to have a master's. Another might be time: If you want to develop officers who can be future admirals in their prime years, you probably need to accelerate the promotion process at some point.

Also, the social differences between the "classes" may really be mostly gone. Trek's vagueness when dealing with enlisted personnel may work to its advantage, there.

In what sense does having people choose "command" as a career path whilst others choose "specialist" not sit with ST philosophy, given that everyone has the option of applying to SF academy, everyone has the option of working towards their chosen career goals?

There is no specialty of "command" that can be taught in school. It is an ongoing process that is developed with assignments of increasing responsibility. Nor is there a "generalist" officer. Naval officers have to have technical expertise and have for hundreds of years. At first it was higher math for navigation and mastering the control of a complex wind-propelled vessel. By WW2 British naval "line" officers had to have a technical specialty: gunnery, torpedoes, navigation, signals, aviation or submarines. The USN was similar but also included propulsion engineering. Admiral Nimitz of WW2 fame could have been the highest-paid diesel engine expert in the country if he'd left the navy as a lieutenant. Starfleet seems to be much the same, officers starting out as engineers, scientists and so on and progressing (or not) to positions of command.
 
There is no specialty of "command" that can be taught in school. It is an ongoing process that is developed with assignments of increasing responsibility. Nor is there a "generalist" officer. Naval officers have to have technical expertise and have for hundreds of years.

Re read my post, I was speaking within the context of the star trek universe, where there has numerous times been references made to command being a speciality and career path in it's own right.

Also, just because the US navy does not teach "command" in school is neither here nor there. The fact that one organisation doesn't offer such a facility (which I'm taking on faith from your post) doesn't detract from the thousands of organisations around the world that do. It can be done and commonly is. This is what management courses are.
 
This is definitely not the case in the US. Nominations to the service academies (except USCG) are given by members of congress
If your parent is/was a recipient of the Medal of Honor you don't need the endorsement of your congress-person, you can apply directly. But that's pretty rare.
 
One possible explanation for Tarses is perhaps Star Fleet Command, in its infinite wisdom, dropped all enlisted ranks/titles save for "Crewman" and "Chief". Have we ever heard the words "Petty Officer" anywhere in Star Trek??

O'Brien was twice identified as a "Chief Petty Officer": in Family where Sergei Rozhenko greets him as "a fellow Chief Petty Officer" and in Hippocratic Oath the Jem'Hadar instantly identify O'Brien as a Chief Petty Officer based on his rank insignia on his collar. Although I don't think anyone has ever been referred to as just "Petty Officer" surely the presence of O'Brien being a CPO indicates there are Petty Officers in Starfleet?

There was also Dorian Collins from Valiant (presumably she was an enlisted recruit rather than an officer cadet):

COLLINS: Are you all right, sir?
JAKE: Yes. It's nothing serious, Cadet er, Chief?
COLLINS: Acting Chief Petty Officer Dorian Collins. The Captain's asked me to escort you both to the bridge. If you'll follow me?


And one of Chu'lak's victims from Field of Fire:

ODO
: Petty Officer Zim Brott. Bolian. Five years of service on Deep Space Nine.
EZRI: I knew him. Or at least Jadzia did. He has a wife and co-husband on Bolarus.

It's possible that Petty Officer is a billet/role (most likely section leadership, cf USAF 1st Sergeant) rather than a rank, but I'm not entirely convinced.
 
I've never been in the military and even I know that was bogus (Scotty was at least as guilty of this). Trip gets a pass IMO as - given that he almost certainly helped build NX-01 he knows the ship far better than his techs.

IMO, anyone who signs up for Starfleet service, regardless of social status may progress to commissioned officer if they meet the academic and psychological requirements. However, I think it's likely that many - if not most - candidates wouldn't want the responsiblity and other demands of being an officer but just want to be out there 'doing something' and therefore become 'crewman' rather than 'officers'.

Simon Tarses is, per dialogue, an example of this:

ANNOTATION: (Picard is pouring tea)
PICARD: There you are, Mister Tarses. Would you care for some lemon?
TARSES: No, thank you, sir. This is fine.
PICARD: Well, tell me a little about yourself, Crewman. I know you were born on Mars Colony.
TARSES: Yes, sir. All my life I wanted to be in Starfleet. I went to the Academy's training programme for enlisted personnel. I took training as a medical technician and I served at several outposts. The day that I was posted to the Enterprise was the happiest day of my life.
PICARD: Did you ever consider applying to the Academy, going the whole route, apply to become an officer?
TARSES: My parents wanted me to. And then I thought about it. I used to sit under this big tree near the parade grounds
PICARD: An elm tree with a circular bench?
TARSES: Yes, that's the one.
PICARD: I spent many an hour there. It was my favourite spot to study.
TARSES: I used to sit under that tree and watch the drills, picture myself an officer. I know that it would have made my mother very happy, but.
PICARD: You didn't do it.
TARSES: No. I was eighteen, and eager. The last thing I wanted to do was spend four years sitting in classrooms. I wanted to be out there, travelling the stars. I didn't want to wait for anything. And now it's done, isn't it? My career in Starfleet is finished.
PICARD: Not if you aren't guilty, Simon.
TARSES: It doesn't matter. I lied on my application, and that mistake will be with me for the rest of my life.

The fact that he has "served on several outposts" prior to being assigned the E-D suggests to me that he is in at least he has been in at least 5 years or as much as 10 depending on how long medical technician training is (at least the 26-28 week pipeline for a USN HM initially, but something like an Associates Degree seems likely by 5-10 year mark (which would probably rate him as a equivalent of a PO1 (typically attained with six years) rather the SN (E3) often assumed by fans).
I kind of thought of the Army, 91A program. Not very long at all. A few posts before Enterprise, he could be as young as 20 or 21.
 
I kind of thought of the Army, 91A program. Not very long at all. A few posts before Enterprise, he could be as young as 20 or 21.

The 68Q course which seems to be about the same length as the 91A course, so Tarses was probably about 19 when he qualified so that part's plausible.

It's the "several outposts" thing that I think is more suggestive. That would suggest a minimum of three, but more likely four or five. For him to be only 20, then his assignments would be an average of only three to five months, 21 would average at six to ten months. The second is just about plausible, the first seems extremely unlikely. If he's been in 5 years, then he's spent between 1 & 2 years depending on how many postings he's had, which seems rather more plausible as a minimum.

Based on USN PO minimums at 21 then he's looking at PO2, by 24 he's potentially a PO1. Army progressions are a little slower as they typically promote to E2 to E3 after 'school', at least one rank lower than the USN as I understand it (tho this is probably dependent on MOS/rating).
 
Again, minimum possible is different from the average. Just because the regs say you can make E-6 in five years doesn't mean anybody does.
 
Again, minimum possible is different from the average. Just because the regs say you can make E-6 in five years doesn't mean anybody does.

Although I think it's possible, I agree that given that Petty Officer exists as least a single rank and/or role (per Field of Fire, implied by Chief Petty Officer), then it's unlikely that Crewman 1st Class is equivalent to Petty Officer first class. However, given that the minimum rate for an Independent Duty Corpsman or Green Berets Medical Sergeant is E5 then I don't think it's unreasonable to assume that Crewman First Class, (Specialism) is broadly equivalent to E4-E5 and that his progression went something like:

Technician School: Recruit (E1)
First Assignment (Outpost): Trainee (E2) promoted to Crewman Medical Technician (E3)
Second Assignment (Outpost): Crewman Medical Technician (E3)
Third Assignment (Outpost): Crewman Medical Technician (E3), promoted to Crewman First Class, Medical Technician (E4-E5).
Fourth Assignment (Enterprise-D): Crewman First Class, Medical Technician (E4-E5). Begins training for promotion to Petty Officer, unlikely to progress after the events of The Drumhead.

I can't see any real weaknesses with the above other than it being more "RN-style" than "USN-style" as it makes NCO status much higher and rarer, but I think that is consistent (rightly or wrongly) with what we've seen on screen.
 
Now I will agree how enlisted personnel are depicted in Starfleet is very sloppy, and O'Brien definitely represents that sloppiness to the point of being the face of it. Part of the problem is that O'Brien wasn't even intended to be enlisted at first, he was addressed as "Lieutenant" by Riker in the second season and wore Lieutenant's pips throughout most of his TNG appearances. The first time he was actually addressed as a "Chief Petty Officer" was in Family, and despite their apparent desire to make him enlisted, he was treated as an officer for much of his time on TNG and DS9. He was the replacement tactical officer on the bridge when Worf left in Redemption, and his position on DS9 really should have gone to an officer, to say nothing of the fact that the early seasons of DS9 had him ordering Lieutenants around, which he shouldn't be able to do since Ensigns outrank him. Not to mention, he does later admit that Lieutenants outrank him, it's the whole source of drama between him and Bashir in Hippocratic Oath.

That isn't the only time I've seen the issue of rank be a little sloppier than it should be when it comes to Star Trek. Yar all but ordering Riker to inform LaForge that the Enterprise-C's tactical systems were below minimum and Riker simply responded with, "acknowledged."

Then again, maybe I'm the only one who found that irksome.
 
That isn't the only time I've seen the issue of rank be a little sloppier than it should be when it comes to Star Trek. Yar all but ordering Riker to inform LaForge that the Enterprise-C's tactical systems were below minimum and Riker simply responded with, "acknowledged."

Then again, maybe I'm the only one who found that irksome.

I can't specifically recall that on the show however, there are certain aspects of a person's job (position ) that permits leeway between ranks that surprise people.

I was a low rank enlisted person working in a supply capacity in an Army medical facility pharmacy. I took numerous bottles of expired aspirine and threw them away.
The next day the same aspirine were back on the shelf.
Per my position I could 'order' the captain, a mid/low range officer to get the items out of the area.
As it transpired, I went wacky nuts and told him the bottles mysteriously got back on the shelf !!!!! Crazy young broad going wacky at him.
Anyway he was okay with that and agreed with me.
Turns out it was a really stupid NCO that was the one 'in charge' that always screwed up ordering.
But I was in my right to go above the captains head and to insist that the items be removed from stock even though he out ranked me by a week and a day.
 
Thing is, O'Brien was confirmed to have gone to Starfleet Academy and everyone who goes to the Academy (after the rigorous testing and application process) comes out an officer. O'Brien was retroactively made an NCO, because RDM thought it would cool for O'Brien and Sergey Rozhenko to be NCOs and banter about their status. In TNG, O'Brien was called "Chief" because he was the Transporter Chief. Just like LT. Kyle was a transporter chief in TOS.

Just the writers playing around and trying to make O'Brien a John Everyman. Berman and Braga did the same thing with Trip in the finale of Enterprise. Trip held the rank of Commander on Enterprise and was the 2nd officer on the ship. Meaning he went to Starfleet Academy, studied, worked hard and got a commission. B&B revealed in TATV that Trip never went to school for engineering and instead learned about warp engines by working on boat engines. The gulf between a matter/anti-matter reactor and a gas and motor boat engine is huge! But hey, he never went to college and is just like John Doe. That's so engaging and not silly.
 
@Shamrock Holmes --- It seems to me that you're suggesting a simplified enlisted corps with only three (four) ranks. You have Recruits who are in Boot Camp / Tech School and don't really count, and then you have Crewmen (75%), Petty Officers (20%) and Chief Petty Officers (5%). Gone are all the ranks/titles of Able Crewman, Crewman First Class, PO Third/Second/First Class, as well as Senior/Master Chief.
 
Yar all but ordering Riker to inform LaForge that the Enterprise-C's tactical systems were below minimum and Riker simply responded with, "acknowledged."
Are you talking about this scene:
CASTILLO: I just can't quite make myself believe it. Twenty two years!
TASHA: I'm reading forty percent on forward shields. What do you have on aft?
CASTILLO: Forty percent.
TASHA: That won't cut it. Commander, advise Lieutenant La Forge that shields are below minimum.
RIKER: Acknowledged.
If so, Tasha doesn't seem out of line there. Maybe she could have said "please" but otherwise she's within the boundaries of protocol.
Thing is, O'Brien was confirmed to have gone to Starfleet Academy and everyone who goes to the Academy (after the rigorous testing and application process) comes out an officer.
Actually, the first reference to O'Brien having been to the Academy is in DS9, Trials and Tribble-Ations to be exact, well after he was established as an NCO.
Berman and Braga did the same thing with Trip in the finale of Enterprise. Trip held the rank of Commander on Enterprise and was the 2nd officer on the ship. Meaning he went to Starfleet Academy,
Well, no, no one went to the Academy in Enterprise, as it hadn't existed yet. Indeed, they are very careful throughout the series never to make an reference to the Academy, just unspecified "Starfleet training." They did slip up once and showed a Starfleet Academy diploma in someone's quarters on the NX-01, but the one who made up the diploma admitted their mistake, saying they weren't aware the Academy didn't exist in the series.
 
Are you sure O'Brien went to Starfleet Academy and not Senior Enlisted Academy, a 6-8 week class for leadership development?
 
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