https://www.military.com/daily-news/2020/06/18/secdef-proposes-getting-rid-of-military-promotion-photos-eliminate-unconscious-bias.html
I do not support the SecDef's proposal. The promotion board photo is a test of the "You had one job" rule. It's a useful discriminator of attention to detail and at the very least, who actually weighs what their fitness report states as their official weight.
I have seen promotion board photos that contained some surprising peculiarities such as ribbons in the wrong order, wearing unauthorized ribbons and devices, and believe it or not having rank insignia placed incorrectly (e.g. a Marine officer with Lieutenant bars placed diagonally like Navy insignia instead of parallel to the seam).
The case of rank insignia placed incorrectly sticks out in my mind because the officer shared a very unique last name and familial resemblance to an active duty Lieutenant General (who was generally well-liked) and it could reasonably be assumed that there was a parental connection. Every member of the board had to know this but nobody said it because known or presumed family relations are not allowed to be considered in the promotion board's deliberations. That individual was as we say in the Marine Corps, "one of the many highly qualified officers of this rank" i.e. in the middle of the pack. The most likely potential bias in that case would have been to lift the individual because of association with a well liked General.
I do not support the SecDef's proposal. The promotion board photo is a test of the "You had one job" rule. It's a useful discriminator of attention to detail and at the very least, who actually weighs what their fitness report states as their official weight.
I have seen promotion board photos that contained some surprising peculiarities such as ribbons in the wrong order, wearing unauthorized ribbons and devices, and believe it or not having rank insignia placed incorrectly (e.g. a Marine officer with Lieutenant bars placed diagonally like Navy insignia instead of parallel to the seam).
The case of rank insignia placed incorrectly sticks out in my mind because the officer shared a very unique last name and familial resemblance to an active duty Lieutenant General (who was generally well-liked) and it could reasonably be assumed that there was a parental connection. Every member of the board had to know this but nobody said it because known or presumed family relations are not allowed to be considered in the promotion board's deliberations. That individual was as we say in the Marine Corps, "one of the many highly qualified officers of this rank" i.e. in the middle of the pack. The most likely potential bias in that case would have been to lift the individual because of association with a well liked General.