Anonymous wrote:People assume it’s easy to join the military or an academy. It isn’t. The Academies are selective and only one way to join the military as an officer. The other option is to go to a 4 year college and do ROTC. Or join After you graduate and apply for Officer Training School /Officer Candidate School depending on which branch. There are a few ways to do it.
There are also prep academies if your child can’t get in with their grades right off the bat that will take you into a service academy.
Don’t forget about schools like the Citadel and VMI. There are plenty of options and your commitments vary based on your job entering the service.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In this political climate, who in their right mind would pursue a military career?
The exact same kinds of people join every year (regardless of the current political leadership or political climate).
+1000
Kids who want to make a difference, even make history (the saying goes that the history classes at West Point teach history made by its graduates). Kids who want to challenge themselves physically, academically and emotionally. Kids who are patriots, understanding our system has its flaws but is still worth dying for.
.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents of anyone with a son or daughter who has gained admission to any one of our national service academies, my rising high school sophomore son says he might be interested in looking at West Point or Annapolis. I'm trying to provide him with some guidance, but I have no idea where to even begin. Questions include how does the application process differ from the regular college application process, how difficult was it to get into, what are they looking for, is is true I need our state senator to nominate them? We woud greatly appreciate anyone who can help answer these questions, and otherwise point us in the right direction.
I'm not reading the whole thread, but, I would ask my kid what career goals they are interested in. Service academies are great if you want to be a lifer in that particular branch of the military. Otherwise, I'd go ROTC. If you aren't a military family, I'd find some folks for your kid to talk to as they exploring what branch and specialty they are interested in.
You honestly have no clue what you are talking about. West Point and Navy grads re in huge demand. If you look at any MBA classes for the big schools you will always see at least 1 or 2 grads because these schools know what kind of leadership a military officer has that is what corporate America wants.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents of anyone with a son or daughter who has gained admission to any one of our national service academies, my rising high school sophomore son says he might be interested in looking at West Point or Annapolis. I'm trying to provide him with some guidance, but I have no idea where to even begin. Questions include how does the application process differ from the regular college application process, how difficult was it to get into, what are they looking for, is is true I need our state senator to nominate them? We woud greatly appreciate anyone who can help answer these questions, and otherwise point us in the right direction.
I'm not reading the whole thread, but, I would ask my kid what career goals they are interested in. Service academies are great if you want to be a lifer in that particular branch of the military. Otherwise, I'd go ROTC. If you aren't a military family, I'd find some folks for your kid to talk to as they exploring what branch and specialty they are interested in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents of anyone with a son or daughter who has gained admission to any one of our national service academies, my rising high school sophomore son says he might be interested in looking at West Point or Annapolis. I'm trying to provide him with some guidance, but I have no idea where to even begin. Questions include how does the application process differ from the regular college application process, how difficult was it to get into, what are they looking for, is is true I need our state senator to nominate them? We woud greatly appreciate anyone who can help answer these questions, and otherwise point us in the right direction.
I'm not reading the whole thread, but, I would ask my kid what career goals they are interested in. Service academies are great if you want to be a lifer in that particular branch of the military. Otherwise, I'd go ROTC. If you aren't a military family, I'd find some folks for your kid to talk to as they exploring what branch and specialty they are interested in.
If you go ROTC b/c of wanting to experience the "college experience," absolutely makes sense. But if you choose ROTC b/c you know you're not going to be lifer and somehow think that expands your opportunities after you serve, that's flat out wrong. Coming from a Service Academy is a golden ticket to the private and public sectors post service.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Very few make it a career. Out of my class of close to 1000 from USNA, about 1/8 stayed for a full 20 years. A large group gets out after their initial commitment.
Most get out at year 8-10 in the USAF. It’s not easy on family life so you see many break off at the halfway point.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents of anyone with a son or daughter who has gained admission to any one of our national service academies, my rising high school sophomore son says he might be interested in looking at West Point or Annapolis. I'm trying to provide him with some guidance, but I have no idea where to even begin. Questions include how does the application process differ from the regular college application process, how difficult was it to get into, what are they looking for, is is true I need our state senator to nominate them? We woud greatly appreciate anyone who can help answer these questions, and otherwise point us in the right direction.
I'm not reading the whole thread, but, I would ask my kid what career goals they are interested in. Service academies are great if you want to be a lifer in that particular branch of the military. Otherwise, I'd go ROTC. If you aren't a military family, I'd find some folks for your kid to talk to as they exploring what branch and specialty they are interested in.
Anonymous wrote:Parents of anyone with a son or daughter who has gained admission to any one of our national service academies, my rising high school sophomore son says he might be interested in looking at West Point or Annapolis. I'm trying to provide him with some guidance, but I have no idea where to even begin. Questions include how does the application process differ from the regular college application process, how difficult was it to get into, what are they looking for, is is true I need our state senator to nominate them? We woud greatly appreciate anyone who can help answer these questions, and otherwise point us in the right direction.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: I also wonder whether the world has lost in that the previous version of this young man was certainly someone who would have made a difference in this world.
uh. He is making a difference in the world. You are sleeping at night without missiles over your head or fear of being sliced at the throat on your way to the post office. This kid chose SERVICE BEFORE SELF. That is a huge difference and honorable.
Anonymous wrote:A very close friend of mine attended USNA. He is dead now -- he was killed in service in 2013. This is a VERY REAL possibility with military service, and one that should be considered seriously by anyone who applies to these schools. You literally owe them your life for at least 4-6 years after graduation, and you can die. I think a lot of teens assume it will never happen to them, but of the two boys I was close to growing up who attended the service academies (my USNA friend and another who attended USAFA), both were dead by 35, killed in service of their country. They were among the best of the best. It can happen to anyone.
As for the experience, the first year was absolutely brutal, and is that way at every service academy. It's how they weed out the weak. After that, it gradually gets physically less tough but academically more intense. You can major in almost anything as long as it's useful to the military. Engineering, law, history, international studies, political science, languages, etc. are all useful. The arts and more niche interests like women's studies, not so much. Your lifestyle is very restricted and regimented as a cadet ... you're rarely allowed to leave campus, often must wear a uniform even off-duty, and sleeping in is not a thing that will happen for you. Also, curfew is serious business. If you're the kind of person who likes to make your own schedule, the military is not for you.
As far as the physicality of it all, PP is right -- kids need to be in perfect health to do this. Not only can health problems disqualify you from the military, they can kill you if you're unaware of them. It's not unheard of for a kid who seemed fine all his life to drop dead or unconscious due to the physical stress of PT when they start at an Academy. Make sure you get a thorough physical examination by an excellent physician.
I think the Academies are a wonderful national resource, building up fine young officers. But there are a lot of risks, risks that should be taken very seriously. The military can be a rewarding career choice, and graduating with money in the bank instead of crippling debt is a great thing. But it may cost you your life someday. It really might.