Anonymous wrote:You really have to look at them. Even the difference between Navy and WP are pretty vast. My DD is still trying to figure out what she is doing between WP, Senior Military College and just a regular ROTC (she has a 4 yr scholarship).
One thing with ROTC is that the funding is caught in the whole fed freeze at the moment. Lots of programs have no idea what is going on or clue about their levels for next year. I would assume that will be figured out by the time your DS is ready but for those of us in the mix right now it is perilous.
I wish mine had love Navy but sadly she didn't. She did love West Point though.
Anonymous wrote:I chose an Army ROTC scholarship at an Ivy over my admission to West Point. I did not enjoy my shadow visit to USMA and decided I wanted a more "normal" college life. I was also not convinced that a 20-year military career was for me and thought the Ivy degree would give me more options plus at least a chance to avoid an active duty commitment if that was the direction I wanted to go (which it ultimately did as I spent my 15-year Army career entirely in the reserves with the exception of necessary active duty training and a single 6-month active duty mobilization). Two of my ROTC contemporaries at the Ivy ultimately made 4 star general -- so there is no limit on potential military advancement as a ROTC grad.
Anonymous wrote:I think the basic answer is that outcomes are as good as they get, but you need to be sold on what it entails. It’s a very tough college experience and they’ll need to fulfill their service obligation. For the right person it’s an amazing opportunity, but for most it will be a tough sell over a more normal experience.
Anonymous wrote:USNA is a wonderful path! It was my DS's dream but unfortunately he failed the physical with a very slight eye misalignment he was not even aware he had. Confirm that there will be no medical disqualification by geting the exam as early as possible as there are so many steps we wasted time on before realizing he could not compete for admission despite smooth sailing on all the other tests (summer academy, senator recommendation, GPA, SAT, etc.).
Anonymous wrote:USNA consistently produces the highest earners, if that matters. It's a top notch education, and the alumni connections are insane. (DH is an academy grad). They hire each other like nothing I've ever seen, not even w/the Ivies.
He graduated in the late 90s, served as a Marine Officer, got out, went to a FAANG and is now a CEO at another tech company.
It's a good path to med school, they'll pay for everything. Have several friends that did that, and did their residencies and time in service at Bethesda Naval Hospital.
I would take a lot of what you're going to get on here with a grain of salt. DCUM really skews weirdly that way.