AETC modernizes Total Force training management with transition to TBA 2.0 Published May 5, 2026 Air Education and Training Command Public Affairs JOINT BASE SAN ANTONIO–RANDOLPH, Texas -- Air Education and Training Command will retire the legacy MyTraining system May 29, as part of the Department of the Air Force’s broader effort to streamline and consolidate redundant information technology systems. The transition shifts users to Training Business Area 2.0, or TBA 2.0, within the Envision platform, aligning training management and readiness reporting under a single enterprise solution. “Moving to TBA 2.0 reduces costs, simplifies processes and gives commanders data-driven insight into readiness at every level,” said Col. Ryan J. Vetter, AETC Deputy Director of Operations and Communications. “With 235 Career Field Education and Training Plans already ingested, supervisors now have a more intuitive tool that connects directly to Envision’s analytics.” MyTraining, a custom-coded system with significant sustainment requirements, will be phased out in favor of TBA 2.0’s integrated capabilities. Call to Action for Training Leaders Units must export and transfer all training records from MyTraining to ensure continuity. Unit training managers and work center supervisors should complete data migration by May 15, with all records fully transitioned no later than May 29. The AETC Learning Services Division will host virtual training sessions through May 21, including general sessions on May 7 and May 21, and dedicated drill sessions for Air Force Reserve Command and Air National Guard personnel on May 3 and May 17. All personnel, whether Active Duty, Guard, or Reserve may attend any session. For training schedules, frequently asked questions and Air Force Specialty Code rollout status, personnel should contact their local unit training manager and join the official TBA 2.0 - Official Microsoft Teams channel for updates and resources, and access TBA 2.0 through Envision. “Standardizing training on a single platform ensures every Airman operates from the same data and readiness picture,” said Senior Master Sgt. Jessica Griffin, AETC Learning Services Division's Senior Enlisted Leader. “That consistency is critical to how we generate and present combat capability.”