Posted on Aug 13, 2015
SFC A.M. Drake
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Military Officers Don’t Need College Degrees

Military recruiters and top brass like to repeat the refrain that the average member of the armed forces is better educated than the average American. It’s true. According to the Defense Department, nearly 94% of enlisted personnel have a high-school diploma, while only 60% of Americans do. About 83% of officers have a bachelor’s degree, in comparison with 30% of the general population.

These statistics, though, involve a bit of self-selection: Most officers have a bachelor’s degree because becoming an officer generally requires one, though this prerequisite appears increasingly anachronistic.

For one thing, the requirement of a college degree is simply a box for officer candidates to check. It doesn’t matter to the armed forces where you went to school, what you studied, or how well you did—short of a minimal GPA level of about 2.5 out of 4.0.

Scholarships provided by the Reserve Officer Training Corps and military academies such as West Point and Annapolis may have more stringent criteria, but in general anyone with a four-year degree who can pass the basic background checks and physical requirements of the military may apply for Officer Candidate School.

Instead of mandating that officers have college degrees, the military should expand alternative avenues to officership. A few exceptions to the degree mandate already exist: Warrant officers or limited-duty officers—typically highly trained specialists in technical fields like avionics or equipment maintenance—have worked their way to officership. Their service is akin to apprenticeship, where useful knowledge is gained through practical experience, not textbook theory. Why not offer the same deal to other recruits?

Historically, a college degree signaled superior intelligence, critical reasoning and writing skills, and dedication. A degree holder could be expected to form logical, coherent arguments and effectively communicate ideas. But a college degree in 2015 no longer signals—let alone guarantees—much of anything.

According to a 2014 Lumina-Gallup poll, “just 11% of business leaders strongly agree that higher education institutions in this country are graduating students with the skills and competencies that their business needs, and 17% strongly disagree.” In a Chronicle for Higher Education survey published in March 2013, employers said that applicants with degrees lacked decision-making and problem-solving abilities, written and oral communication skills, adaptability, and even the capacity to manage multiple priorities.

Even more than in civilian environments, those are skills needed for war. If a college degree no longer confers them, then why should the armed forces require it at all? Beyond the usual arguments about the prohibitive cost for many high-school graduates unable to take on debt, a college degree isn’t needed to be successful. Peter Thiel, an accomplished tech businessman, offers a fellowship of $100,000 for aspiring entrepreneurs who want to skip college and build businesses instead. Companies started as a result now employ 200 people and have generated $200 million in economic activity, according to the fellowship.

Some may argue that obtaining a bachelor’s degree shows responsibility or maturity. Yet how much responsibility does a typical single, childless 22-year-old college senior have? Has he demonstrated greater responsibility than a 22-year-old corporal at the end of his first tour of duty? Has he even demonstrated greater responsibility than a 19-year-old private first class after six months of service?

The only mark of distinction that a college degree still indicates, perhaps, is dedication. It usually requires four or more years to achieve, and following through to the end suggests long-term commitment to a goal. Yet clearly, college and putting off the working world is not for everyone. In 2013, the six-year graduation rate in the U.S. was only 59%, according to the National Center for Education Statistics.

Commitment is certainly important to success in the military, but the armed forces already have a way to measure and test it: a four-year enlistment. If aspiring officers must demonstrate commitment and responsibility, completing a four-year enlistment should suffice. If they must prove raw intellectual aptitude, high scores on the military’s own General Classification Test should be enough. If they must have general knowledge and the ability to think and write coherently, an exam akin to the State Department’s Foreign Service Officer Test would work.

A combination of these could easily form a new path to an officer’s commission—and providing an alternative to the bachelor’s degree would produce an even more qualified officer corps.

http://www.wsj.com/article_email/military-officers-dont-need-college-degrees [login to see] -lMyQjAxMTI1NzE3MzMxNTM3Wj
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Responses: 126
CW4 Carl Williams
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At least a BSc to Commission.
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1LT Erin Berg
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I disagree and take exception to your attitude that a college degree doesn't demonstrate a superior ability to form coherent, logical ideas and an excellent ability to communicate. You try going to nursing school and not graduate with these skills ingrained to the maximum. Some college degrees more commitment and dedication than others, but please do not lump all grads together.
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MAJ Operations Officer (S3)
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Very interesting points
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SPC Phil Norton
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As far as I am aware you don't have go to college to get a battlefield commission. This being said the degree is a requirement. Quit trying to change traditional military values. Heck let's just all go to flight school or heck let's say a combat medic should become a PA after 3 tours of duty. Not going to happen unless you go to school
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GySgt Melissa Gravila
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I'm enlisted- through and through. With that being said, I also have my college degrees; I feel I would be doing myself as well as my customers a grave injustice by not having that knowledge. I don't pretend to know the Officer's side of the house, but I do know mine. There is no such thing as too much knowledge, but I do feel that there does need to be that type of requirement for Officers/Warrant Officers etc. I know I associate the words "Officer", "leader", "educated", "knowledgeable". I'm not saying all knowledge is in a book, but, we do need a standard or a bar as it were to judge by. I found myself re-reading this article several times, I wasn'the sure if the writer was just slamming Officers in general, or if he was trying to convey a sense of a way to improve the process. Either way, the writer has confused this salty jarhead.
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LTC Jason Mackay
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SPC Roy Stamps
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If a Military Officer chooses to pursue a degree in his spare time that is great, just like when anybody tries to better him or herself. But to do what we do in the Army as troops on the ground. i never knew a degree to help navigate to an objective, unless they are an engineer or demolition expert and blowing up bridges. Yes that kind of a degree can help with a mission. But the average infantry soldier needs and officer who will lead by example and not get bent out of shape when one of his spec 4 team leaders or ground ponders tells him that he is wrong and why. He needs to be able to adjust overcome and learn from the experience of his troops. and for some reason a guy with a degree seems to think he is all knowing and he usually is not. So I say get the practical experience first, and then get your degree once you know what you don't want to be.
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SSgt Defense Paralegal
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This idea is preposterous!

No other way to explain it.
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SFC Retired
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They should earn a degree. Of course they should serve as enlisted first so they actually have a clue before they ass-ume that they know what they are talking about. It's how the Military started out and only thru social class issues did it change. The only squared away officers I've meet or worked with that didn't have to have the arrogance and ignorance issues dealt with were prior enlisted. Education is always a good thing for a leader. But does what is essentially a degreed private need to be leading? That's the real question.
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2d Lt Pilot Trainee
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Edited >1 y ago
Asking if an officer needs a bachelor's degree to carry out his or her duties is like asking if a 17 or 18 year old really needs a high school diploma to enlist. In either case does that piece of paper – in and of itself – confer the necessary skills to perform military duties? I would arguably probably not. (For officers working in very technically focused fields such as engineering or a medical discipline, there is definitely an institutional/societal expectation that your credentials should accurately reflect your professional abilities. In these cases, the degrees do matter and should without question be required for commissioning.) Anyway, in my tenure with the military, which now spans almost ten years and with two different branches, I can affirmatively state I have met a few high school and college “graduates” who probably would not be able to spell their own names if they didn’t have nametapes sewn onto their uniforms. It is my experience these people are the exception, not the rule. Many recruiters have commented to me that the general line of thinking with regard to requiring enlisted applicants to possess a high school diploma is that it shows some level of commitment and willingness to follow instruction, take orders, etc. – to see something through. If you can’t (or chose not to) complete high school, why should the military invest time and money sending you to boot camp and technical training when you might very well flake out? The same could be said for an aspiring military officer being required to possess a bachelor's degree before being allowed to proceed in the application process. If you want to be an officer, then earn a college degree. Right, wrong or indifferent – that’s the military’s policy. So quit whining and just get it done.
A LOT of people, both enlisted and civilian, say they want to become officers. Yet when I ask “How far are you into your college education?”, if they’re not a graduate, I usually get a reply involving “dealing with other commitments”,” I have kids” or “taking care of family issues”. (I dealt with a lot of hardships while in college and I managed to graduate with honors. Many current officers have had to balance other responsibilities while they were attending school. Hell, many senior enlisted leaders complete advanced degrees while on active duty. They’re not required to do it, but they want to and get it done. Now that’s motivating!) Officers are leaders. They make things happen. If you can’t get your act together to make time for going to class and studying, why should the military award you an OCS/OTS slot when other applicants have done those things and have successfully graduated? At the end of the day, a college degree is just one instrument for the selection of potential military officers. (I say potential, because even if you are selected, that doesn’t mean you’ll commission. You still have to get through OTS/OCS. These programs aren’t exactly cakewalks.) All branches also require officer applicants to take some type of standardized aptitude test (ASTB, AFOQT, SAT/ACT) as well – so just getting good grades in college isn’t enough.
Having recently applied to an Air Force Officer Selection Board and then being subsequently selected for a pilot slot (found out last week), I can tell you the process is arduous and very detailed oriented. Your civilian work history, recognized accomplishments/awards, moral qualifications, physical assessment scores, GPA, letters of recommendation, professional references and interview results (if your branch requires a field interview with a commissioned officer – the Air Force does) are scrutinized with unbelievable detail. Just having a degree doesn’t cut it. Selection boards really put a lot of emphasis on the “whole person” concept. They want well-rounded individual. Again, a degree is one box of many to check and just because you check all the boxes doesn’t mean you’ll get selected. I’m not saying the system’s perfect, but it appears to work pretty well. So, barring some pretty unique circumstances (LDO positions, Army WO Pilots, etc.) I’m in the camp that says, GENERALLY, military officers should hold college degrees.
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