Airman first class
Airman first class (A1C) is the third enlisted rank in the United States Air Force, just above airman and below senior airman. The male form of rank designation also applies to women. The rank of airman first class is considered a junior enlisted rank, with the non-commissioned officers and senior non-commissioned officers above it.
Airman first class is a rank that has also been used by the
Etymology
Airmen first class are often nicknamed "dragonfly wings" due to the insignia's resemblance to that insect’s two pairs of wings.
History
At its cleanest, the rank name "airman first class", created in 1952, first applied to the paygrade rank of E-4 (1952–1967), then was applied to the paygrade of E-3, from 1967 onward.
Over those years, as the air force changed rank names for the E-1 through E-4 paygrades, some names were moved between ranks. In greater detail, from 1947 to 1952, the E-3 rank was named "air force corporal", renamed "airman second class" (A2C) in 1952, and, as stated, renamed airman first class since 1967. From 1952 to 1959, the E-1 rank was "basic airman", wording rearranged to airman basic from 1959, left unchanged since; the E-2 rank was "airman third class" (A3C), renamed to simply airman in 1967; and, from 1952 to 1967, the E-4 rank was, as stated, "airman first class", renamed to "air force sergeant" (a.k.a. "buck sergeant"), a supervisory non-commissioned officer, in 1967, with the name senior airman added as a second, non-supervisory, E-4 rank in 1976 – continuing until 1998, when the last E-4 buck sergeant left the Air Force, and all remaining (and future) E-4s carried the name senior airman.[1][2]
Criteria
Promotion to airman first class occurs upon one or more of the following:
- Completion of 10 months time in the grade of airman (or earlier for airmen with specific specialities)
- Completion of three years of the Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps (JROTC) sponsored by any of the four branches of the service
- Completion of two years of college-level Reserve Officer Training Corps(ROTC)
- Earning the Billy Mitchell Award in the Civil Air Patrol[3]
- Completion of at least 45 semester hours or at least 67 quarter hours of accredited junior college/college credits. [4]
- Agreeing to an extended-length enlistment (normally six years).
Those personnel who qualify for these early promotions to airman first class wear the insignia of this rank during their basic training graduation ceremonies at
Those who are promoted to this level upon completion of basic training also receive a retroactive pay increment that brings them up to the E-3 pay grade corresponding to airman first class, going back to day one of their enlistment. In other words, they get paid as if they had enlisted as an airman first class. However, if for some reason they get expelled from basic training, they do not receive this extra pay, and just get paid as airmen basic for the time that they spent in the Air Force before getting discharged. This is after the Air Force deducts the cost of basic hygiene products and other costs like shaving razors from the recruits.
Airmen first class are considered to be fully adjusted to Air Force and military life, and their duties focus on efficiently and effectively carrying out their assignments and honing their job skills.
See also
- U.S. Air Force enlisted rank insignia
- United States military pay
Notes
- ^ The U.S. Navy has very similar six-year enlistments for nuclear power, and electronics.
References
- ^ "A Chronology of the Air Force Enlisted Chevrons", page 5
- ^ Spink, Barry L. "A Chronology of the Enlisted Rank Chevron of the United States Air Force", Air Force Historical Research Agency, February 19, 1992, page 14.
- ^ Cadet Super Chart. N.p., n.d. Web. 16 Mar. 2014. Archived 2011-07-19 at the Wayback Machine.
- ^ "http://static.e-publishing.af.mil/production/1/af_a1/publication/afi36-2002/afi36-2002.pdf" Air Force Instruction 36-2002, Enlisted Accessions. Paragraph 4.5.1, Table 4.1, Rule 2. 11 July 2017.