Fast Eddie
Registered User
I would like to pose this question to the kind officer recruiter helping out in this forum, or anyone else who may be able to help.
I am graduating in May from the University of Maryland with a degree in Mathematics (along with a lot of computer science coursework and work experience).
My college life was highly distracting at best leaving me with about a 2.6-2.7 GPA. However, I scored over 1500 on my SATs in high school, and I am confident I could do extremely well on any test they administer. I have a high level of physical fitness. I'm sure I could complete the 100 pushups, 100 situps, 8.3 minute 1.5mi. (5'10", 190lbs. Trained for competitive powerlifting in college)
This leads me to my question.. do many Mathematicians apply for the cryptology designator? I'm not sure of the duties required, but traditionally advances in cryptology were exclusively the realm of mathematicians, so I was wondering if there was a demand in this designation for them. I actually specialized in number theory, and I wrote a small paper on public key cryptology that I would like to submit with my application.. Are we disallowed (or discouraged for that matter) to submit supplimentary materials like this? Can submissions of letters of recommendation sway the decision considerably? I am good friends with a Navy Captain who would certainly write me a glowing recommendation. He is from Oklahoma and knows Admiral Crowe well (ambassador to UK), so maybe I could talk him into bugging him for a recommendation
. I'm really not sure how the politics involved work..
I am very interested in this designation, but I am severely worried about my GPA and the lack of positions I am hearing about.
Thanks for any comments!
Ed Frederick
I am graduating in May from the University of Maryland with a degree in Mathematics (along with a lot of computer science coursework and work experience).
My college life was highly distracting at best leaving me with about a 2.6-2.7 GPA. However, I scored over 1500 on my SATs in high school, and I am confident I could do extremely well on any test they administer. I have a high level of physical fitness. I'm sure I could complete the 100 pushups, 100 situps, 8.3 minute 1.5mi. (5'10", 190lbs. Trained for competitive powerlifting in college)
This leads me to my question.. do many Mathematicians apply for the cryptology designator? I'm not sure of the duties required, but traditionally advances in cryptology were exclusively the realm of mathematicians, so I was wondering if there was a demand in this designation for them. I actually specialized in number theory, and I wrote a small paper on public key cryptology that I would like to submit with my application.. Are we disallowed (or discouraged for that matter) to submit supplimentary materials like this? Can submissions of letters of recommendation sway the decision considerably? I am good friends with a Navy Captain who would certainly write me a glowing recommendation. He is from Oklahoma and knows Admiral Crowe well (ambassador to UK), so maybe I could talk him into bugging him for a recommendation

I am very interested in this designation, but I am severely worried about my GPA and the lack of positions I am hearing about.
Thanks for any comments!
Ed Frederick