Is it really possible to graduate college with an engineering degree and do ROTC at the same, or is that a joke?
Would the Navy provide funding for a 5th year of study in college? If so, would that only apply to engineering majors?
Yes, definitely! I took calc III over the summer during CORTRAMID (the cruise after freshman year) and am getting my post-sophomore cruise waived to study abroad in order to graduate on time. This is the only cruise that you can get waived so a lot of my classmates are taking a summer semester this year as well.Thank you for the response, Olivia and congrats in your accomplishments. Very impressive indeed.
If needed, do you happen to know if it is possible to squeeze in a summer course or two to graduate on time? If the cruises are 6 weeks, I would assume, no. If the cruises are 4 weeks, perhaps, yes.
Either way, it is good to know that the Navy allows for some flexibility for difficult majors.
Thanks, so ROTC can and will pay for 5 years of study if you are engineering and maybe something like physics or math, if you take on a minor or double major, as long you take at least 15 credits per semester?
I didn't mean to be funny. I just understand that it is difficult to graduate with an engineering degree in 4 years, even if one does nothing but study for all those 4 years.
The only cruise that’s required is your first class cruise before commissioning. I had four year scholarship friends skip their earlier cruises for study abroad programs and summer courses at the college or back at home for transfer credit from community college (what I did for chem).Thank you for the response, Olivia and congrats in your accomplishments. Very impressive indeed.
If needed, do you happen to know if it is possible to squeeze in a summer course or two to graduate on time? If the cruises are 6 weeks, I would assume, no. If the cruises are 4 weeks, perhaps, yes.
Either way, it is good to know that the Navy allows for some flexibility for difficult majors.
Wow! Thanks for that insight, Waveoff! While graduating in 4 years in preferable for all involved: student, parents, the navy, I realize that very few people out there have what it takes to pull an engineering degree off in 4 years, even without an extracurricular, like ROTC. I personally would much rather do 5 if I could graduate with better grades and actually enjoy my collegiate experience with being constantly stress and harried.I came into my freshman year two classes shy of being a sophomore with AP credit, took winter classes, summer classes, and online classes during the year and still barely graduated in 4 years with my sanity. They basically guilted us into doing it in 4 years or being labeled a failure.
Once I went on my 1st class cruise and learned how many people took an extra semester or a full year and actually enjoyed the experience, I was livid at our front office person for not making us aware of the option earlier. Also come to find out that at my friends university they made all of the engineering students apply for fifth year benefits off the bat so they could either use it or turn it down later.
Thanks..any chance a 5th year benefit would apply to a Tier 2 major such as math, applied math, or physics. I am looking at those majors as well. I know engineering is the deemed the hardest, with all its requirements, but physics can be hard too, especially if one wants to do research or graduate with departmental honors.I did part of a 5th year to finish up my engineering degree. Not a big deal.
I have known several who did running start and that allowed them to complete their engineering degree in 4 years or less, is that something that could be an option for you?Is it really possible to graduate college with an engineering degree and do ROTC at the same, or is that a joke?
Would the Navy provide funding for a 5th year of study in college? If so, would that only apply to engineering majors?
Thx.