Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The scholarship pay 85k x 4 ? What is the catch?
The scholarship pays tuition and fees, so it’s not $85k.
At some schools, room and board is covered by the university. Not sure how common that is, but it was not a policy for any of my kids (3 different universities)
As for payback, it can be Active Duty or Reserves. It depends on the needs of each service, students do not always get their preference.
Wash. U. and some other St. Louis-area schools offer at least some ROTC scholarship holders room and board:
https://sites.wustl.edu/rotc/gateway-battalion-scholarship-benefits/
I don’t understand from the summary whether Wash. U. offers room and board for up to 31 students in every class or 31 students universitywide.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The scholarship pay 85k x 4 ? What is the catch?
The scholarship pays tuition and fees, so it’s not $85k.
At some schools, room and board is covered by the university. Not sure how common that is, but it was not a policy for any of my kids (3 different universities)
As for payback, it can be Active Duty or Reserves. It depends on the needs of each service, students do not always get their preference.
Anonymous wrote:Did everyone gloss over the B/C student part? Yes, ROTC is great but in no way is a B or C student competitive for ROTC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honest question. What happens if you start the program and realize it is too much. What are the penalties? Do you have to withdraw from the university too since that was presumably your hook?
You can withdraw after freshman year, but if you stay past years 2 or 3(can't remember the number), you must commit to military service.
Future Corps of Cadets mom - until the military starts paying you money, you are not on the hook for anything (although from your junior year you will be commissioned and then your service obligation begins). My understanding is if you get a four-year scholarship, your service obligation begins once you hit your sophomore year.
Another related point - at the two schools with Corps of Cadets (VT and Texas A&M) you can be in all four years and never join the military. They have a Civilian Leadership Corp for students that want the experience but don’t want to join the military (there’s a good chance DS will end up doing this)
Anonymous wrote:Honest question. What happens if you start the program and realize it is too much. What are the penalties? Do you have to withdraw from the university too since that was presumably your hook?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honest question. What happens if you start the program and realize it is too much. What are the penalties? Do you have to withdraw from the university too since that was presumably your hook?
You can withdraw after freshman year, but if you stay past years 2 or 3(can't remember the number), you must commit to military service.
Anonymous wrote:Honest question. What happens if you start the program and realize it is too much. What are the penalties? Do you have to withdraw from the university too since that was presumably your hook?
Anonymous wrote:My DS just accepted his admission offer for the Corps of Cadets at Virginia Tech this evening, so my knowledge is very fresh! I have learned a tremendous amount in the last year (note that DS is a stronger student - 4.0 weighted, and has been is JROTC for the last 4 years).
The previous poster is right on the money - I have been surprised how competitive it is to get a 4 year ROTC scholarship). DS will be getting a grand total of $1K a year to be in the Corps. I don’t think you should assume at all that he will get his college paid for by ROTC starting his freshman year.
That being said, it does seem like getting a scholarship starting your junior year is much more doable (but far from a sure thing). I can’t comment on other places, though, but this is my sense.