 Scout school is a six-week preparatory course for our scouts 03-11s in L.A.R. Traditionally L.A.R. is kind of a mix of 03-13s, so LAV crewmen and 03-11s. So the 03-11s come out here for scout school while the crewmen do more gunnery with the vehicles. And the overall purpose of scout school is to start them off with a basic skill set and understanding of orders riding, machine gun employment, and land navigation. And then it'll end with the culminating events being PECS, which we're currently at right now, and then FECS, which is more of a sort of like instructor style like hands-off approach to them making their own decisions at the squad level. So this helps prepare the junior Marines as they have not been on deployment out here and kind of gets them really thinking at the tactical level. And it also forces them to hold leadership roles that normally their squad leader would be in. However, we don't bring their squad leaders out here, they serve in the role themselves, and it allows them to really mature as, you know, lance corpals into that team leader position or corpals out here into the squad leader position that they may have not have held yet in their normal squad. Yeah, I would say the biggest thing they get out of this that they haven't had before is the leadership experience and tactical sort of mindset that they go from being a team leader to a squad leader or just a general team member to a team leader and having to go into the actual planning process with orders riding because that's kind of a little bit of a shock to them just right off the bat having to stay up later, riding orders, and then really plan their own Kazovac routes and things like that on these patrols. So I would say this school impacts the Marine Corps by contributing to a more lethal force. Right off the bat these scouts have come out here done really well with their land nav, really well with their machine gun employment, developing, you know, their own attacks, pulling MSLs and everything like that. And it further develops them as leaders into roles just by giving them more responsibility. You know, they're doing their own EDL accounts for all their serialized equipment they're taking out there on these patrols and the instructors that are with them are really just a safety backstop. So it definitely gives them more leadership experience than they would anywhere else. Yeah, absolutely. I would say that, you know, without scout school these guys would probably be not helping assist with the LABs and stuff like that, which is good. But this kind of break off from being with the traditional LAR platoon right now gives them the chance to just hone in on their specific scout skills and really mature and get to where they need to be for a workout. Yeah, everybody out here is second LAR. We have our Bravo Company out here. They just came back from their Mew. Most of our OP4 are made up of the Bravo Company team leaders and squad leaders that are out here. And then we also have a separate Sea Burn platoon that's out here getting some training, doing some scouting and patrolling and working really against us. We give them a few fragos and they really work themselves to kind of get their assessment of us as scout school and come out and, you know, interdict our actions. Outside of the patrol base. So patrolling is really important because it allows like the platoon commander to gain intelligence on the enemy and his whereabouts being area of operations. And in addition to that helps us keep the enemy on their toes. Kind of second guessing like what our actions are and denies them the ability to connect, collect information on us. Overall it's crucial.