Anonymous wrote:I truly cannot believe how ignorant some people are. My parents were both high school drop outs and half of my siblings didn't go to college. But we obviously knew the service academies were prestigious. People on this thread should be embarrassed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I get it, OP. I come from a part of the country where I didnt know a single military member/vet other than my drafted grandfathers. Not a single person from my graduating class of 550 went into the military. When my sister’s boyfriend ended up attending the naval academy the following year, we were all fairly shocked—it wasn’t a typical path. (To be completely transparent though, he had applied to a handful of civilian schools and didn’t get in—USNA was the only option he had once decisions came out).
It worked out well for him, but it wasn’t until moving to DC that I learned it’s considered prestigious. I assumed at the time it had been his safety school since it was the only one he got into, lol.
Bullshit.
I don’t know how to prove it is true, but it really is. This was 2005 in an area where the closest (tiny) military bases were hours away. It just wasn’t a thing in my life at that time. Totally different mentality in dc adjacent areas, where I now have more military acquaintances than I can count.
I think the bullshit refers to "it was his only option." And I agree. Unless he only applied to Harvard, Princeton, Yale and Stanford.
Right there is 0% chance that his ONLY option was the Naval Academy. 0%.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a professor at an R1 school, I have only vaguely heard of this. I thought it was like community college.
Well, you should be ashamed of yourself then.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I get it, OP. I come from a part of the country where I didnt know a single military member/vet other than my drafted grandfathers. Not a single person from my graduating class of 550 went into the military. When my sister’s boyfriend ended up attending the naval academy the following year, we were all fairly shocked—it wasn’t a typical path. (To be completely transparent though, he had applied to a handful of civilian schools and didn’t get in—USNA was the only option he had once decisions came out).
It worked out well for him, but it wasn’t until moving to DC that I learned it’s considered prestigious. I assumed at the time it had been his safety school since it was the only one he got into, lol.
Bullshit.
I don’t know how to prove it is true, but it really is. This was 2005 in an area where the closest (tiny) military bases were hours away. It just wasn’t a thing in my life at that time. Totally different mentality in dc adjacent areas, where I now have more military acquaintances than I can count.
My spouse grew up in the middle of nowhere in Central Flyover Country to parents who didn't go to college. They knew it. You're embarrassing yourself. I wouldn't tell anyone in real life that you didn't know about the service academies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:i was chatting with a friend who mentioned that their high achieving rising junior was hoping to attend a service academy (West Point or USNA). They don't have a family military background and are certainly not hurting for money. My sense is that the kid could go to any school they wanted. It's not an understatement to say that choosing a service academy path totally floored me. What is the draw here or what am I missing? Is this considered a prestigious route in some circles?
It's considered a "prestigious route" in ALL circles. Except, maybe, the ignorant ones.![]()
OP here - I'm willing to claim ignorance. I guess I wouldn't be surprised if the family were conservative, but given that they are left-leaning it was surprising. It sounds like I'm the one who needs schooling in this though. My kids are much younger and I'm from the midwest if that serves as any sort of explanation.
I grew up in the Midwest too, OP and had never heard of it. When meeting my now WP attending husband and he told me where he went to school clearly trying to impress me, I completely blew him off and flippantly said “oh, I’ve never heard of it”. I truly had never heard of it. What a moron I was. Yes, it’s very prestigious.
You had never heard of West Point?
Seriously?
Yes
No one in my midwest school ever went there. I did not know anyone who served in the military except some uncles who were drafted and had no choice. There are no military bases nearby. It’s just different than it is here with many service people around.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:i was chatting with a friend who mentioned that their high achieving rising junior was hoping to attend a service academy (West Point or USNA). They don't have a family military background and are certainly not hurting for money. My sense is that the kid could go to any school they wanted. It's not an understatement to say that choosing a service academy path totally floored me. What is the draw here or what am I missing? Is this considered a prestigious route in some circles?
It's considered a "prestigious route" in ALL circles. Except, maybe, the ignorant ones.![]()
OP here - I'm willing to claim ignorance. I guess I wouldn't be surprised if the family were conservative, but given that they are left-leaning it was surprising. It sounds like I'm the one who needs schooling in this though. My kids are much younger and I'm from the midwest if that serves as any sort of explanation.
I grew up in the Midwest too, OP and had never heard of it. When meeting my now WP attending husband and he told me where he went to school clearly trying to impress me, I completely blew him off and flippantly said “oh, I’ve never heard of it”. I truly had never heard of it. What a moron I was. Yes, it’s very prestigious.
You had never heard of West Point?
Seriously?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They provide and excellent education. It's that simple. Of course, that comes with significant strings attached, and you need to be aware of and okay with them.
It's not "strings attached." They want to sign up.