http://pib.myiris.com/features/article.php3?fl=02060608832 wrote:
The IAS Professional Course, Phase-I lasts 24 weeks. After completing the Foundation Course, the IAS Officer Trainees undergo the Professional Course Phase-I. This course aims at developing and hone their professional skills in handling a large range of responsibilities that an officer shoulders within the first ten years of service. The course seeks to strengthen the understanding of the environment in which an IAS officer has to function. It helps develop values, ideals and attributes desirable in an IAS officer. Emphasis is laid on understanding of public systems and their management, together with a grounding in public administration, law, economics and computer-applications. During Phase-I, the IAS Probationers are sent on a winter study tour-cum-Bharat Darshan comprising of a number of attachments such as with the three Armed Forces, public and private sector units, municipal bodies, voluntary agencies, non-government organisations and attachments in disturbed areas. The Winter Study Tours end with an attachment to the Bureau of Parliamentary Studies and Training (BPST) where officer trainees get an opportunity to meet parliamentarians and various other dignitaries in the capital.
It does not specify length of attachment...even the person I was listening to did not refer to length...I am pretty sure it was long enough for them to come up with a solution (don't ask me what it was) so that the young and impressionable babus and lady babus had to figure out how to put a stop to the 5:30am parades and eventually they did. Again this was a private conversation...so things should be left unstated at some point. The outcome was they were finally given a concession that they can get up at 7:30am and not attend parade.....again it has something to do with when breakfast and
chai was served. Babus do not function without
chai.

Oh and there is another fact that IA might lacks or the IN person I spoke to had better exposure.
Just like you can be a good politician but a lousy administrator, you can be a fine soldier/sailor/airman but a lousy administrator/manager. And when you goto Dilli-MOD/or whatever Sena Bhavan/or other places that require your services you are now in an integrated team. This might be second nature in the private sector but apparently due to reasons unknown in some instances they put the wrong person in the mix. And when you talk to your peers from FinMin, MOD etc you REPRESENT one of the services.
They do not care/may not be aware how many al-keeda you killed with your bare hands, you are there to talk to them about xxx project and you might know how important that is in al-keeda killing but you are still dealing with babus from FinMin and MOD who have a zillion projects and your xxx happens to one of them. It is unfair to expect FinMin or MOD babu to assume your xxx Project which will help kill al-keeda is more important (hypersimplification) than next guy they meet who is a IN guy who has yyy Project which might deal with next gen ECM. You piss (again hypersimplication) off the babu by telling him how you killed al-keeda with bare hands the IN guys bares the brunt of it.
And we are talking about jingo type projects, you need FinMin and MOD for bread & butter stuff like infrastructure etc. People management is very important.