Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank you for starting this topic. My rising junior is also seriously considering ROTC. His older sibling is at one of the HYPMS which also has a great ROTC program. For admissions (assuming he gets the scholarship), does ROTC provide any sort of boost at all?
I know how hard it is to be admitted so really trying to manage expectations.
I'm OP and clearly I am in the process of learning about this, so I defer to any corrections on this, but my understanding is that you apply to the college's ROTC once you've been admitted to the school. You can also apply for national ROTC scholarships but they make it clear that listing the colleges you're interested in as part of that application in no way guarantees admission.
Ok, thank you. From our very early understanding, it sounds like (if sibling's college is first choice), that he should apply REA while simultaneously planning for the first ROTC board which happens in October. Then the board decision will come out just a few weeks before the REA decision, and hopefully if it's a yes, then DC will update his application that he received the ROTC scholarship. I don't know what happens after that point... but hoping that the ROTC scholarship will give a small boost?
Don't count on getting in the first round. It's a very small percentage that do.
Anonymous wrote:Military retiree family. I'd prefer to pay for college and not have my kids owe anything and go in as officers. Its a lot during college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid at a T20 has ROTC friends -- those friends reported applying for ROTC in part due to the admissions bump. Not sure the bump is real, but current students perceive it to be so.
The bump is real.
Anonymous wrote:My kid at a T20 has ROTC friends -- those friends reported applying for ROTC in part due to the admissions bump. Not sure the bump is real, but current students perceive it to be so.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank you for starting this topic. My rising junior is also seriously considering ROTC. His older sibling is at one of the HYPMS which also has a great ROTC program. For admissions (assuming he gets the scholarship), does ROTC provide any sort of boost at all?
I know how hard it is to be admitted so really trying to manage expectations.
So thinking about ROTC for an admissions boost????![]()
Anonymous wrote:Thank you for starting this topic. My rising junior is also seriously considering ROTC. His older sibling is at one of the HYPMS which also has a great ROTC program. For admissions (assuming he gets the scholarship), does ROTC provide any sort of boost at all?
I know how hard it is to be admitted so really trying to manage expectations.
Anonymous wrote:I know this must vary widely by program and school but if anyone has ROTC experience to share, especially at a T20 school (nothing is for sure but some of these are target schools for my kid) I would be grateful. Basically, I'm wondering if your child (or you) felt happy and satisfied with the decision to do ROTC.
But they’re applying now.Anonymous wrote:Nah. Anyone starting ROTC even this fall will not be commissioned until after Trump is out of office.Anonymous wrote:As the military transitions from professional and non-political to Trumpified, expect any ROTC bump to shrink.
Anonymous wrote:As the military transitions from professional and non-political to Trumpified, expect any ROTC bump to shrink.
Anonymous wrote:DC1 rising junior at ivy (RD) on AFROTC scholarship. Immediately after being awarded the scholarship schools that were on the kids top 5 list started to reach out and asked to ED. DC1 enjoys AFROTC and time management is very important. DC1 has been offered research positions at different base last year and this year. DC1 is off to field training in a few days.
DC2 will be attending ivy (ED) on NROTC scholarship in the fall. scholarship was awarded on the Dec board after ED decisions, so not sure if it helped.
Good luck!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Military retiree family. I'd prefer to pay for college and not have my kids owe anything and go in as officers. Its a lot during college.
Fair enough but my kid loves the program, is fine with 4 years of military commitment, and ROTC is saving us $400k.
Plus this guarantees they'll have an entry level job when they graduate. Which in 2026+ is far from a given for new grads.