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
SrA James Cannon
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Some years ago, a bachelor's degree wasn't a requirement for commissioning. I personally think that it should not be a requirement. I think that a certain amount of prior military experience should be allowed in lieu of a degree. I also think that the military should allow high school drop outs to apply for entry and then put them through a GED type program like the US Army did up until the mid-80s. It might help some folks who were forced to drop out get their education.
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CSM Charles Hayden
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Baristas at Starbucks or servers in many restaurants are not required to have a degree. Why do so many possess a degree? The lack of critical thinking and problem solving solving skills is reflected in their inability to make correct change after my purchase.

Too many young people are awarded a degree that has no commerical value. That degrades the perceived value of all degrees.
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SGT Philip Roncari
SGT Philip Roncari
>1 y
CSM Charles Hayden- My friend,I didn't know you had become a true renaissance man, Starbucks coffee.baristas,I'm impressed it's a long way from "C" rats coffee and angry mess sergeants (all the ones I met were always yelling) you are as usual point on with your comments.your friend I hope Phil.
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CSM Charles Hayden
CSM Charles Hayden
>1 y
SGT Philip Roncari - My long days on KP were always lengthened by a MEAN cook who was never satisfied with my 'Trays'. He always said they were greasy and needed to be redone!

Starbuck's? I can even 'pay' there with my iPhone!
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Yeah, I think 4 years enlistment is a good prequisite to becoming an officer as well as MOS specific competence exam. You need someone that starts from the bottom and gains experience. When you do become in charge, you can make on the spot corrections and suggestions to the commander that makes that job more efficient.
MAJ Operations Officer (S3)
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7 y
Lt, the program to which you refer already exist, these officers are Warrants.
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Lt Col Strategic Planning Officer
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I think a degree is critical for both commissioned and non-commissioned officers. As has been pointed out, a degree doesn't make you a good leader or officer but college fosters critical thinking which is needed more then ever in this fiscally limited and increasingly complex environment in which we all operate.
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PO1 Mass Communication Specialist
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Military officers and their respective degrees doesn't always lend them to being leaders. Just as civilians out in the world strive to continue education and success, so do most officers. Why have a Limited Duty Officer... because they are prior enlisted, able to understand the effectiveness of their crew, from experience. The degree does nothing. I'm an E-6 and very close to finishing my Masters degree... what makes me different from an officer? An oath, and rank on my uniform. Degree's help you in work processes, but skill-sets, set you aside as a specialist, and someone who can complete the job at hand. Officers are only fired, while enlisted are convicted and punished. This is not a conducive or constructive process. The degree requirements derive from early class structured dynamics from Europe, of the educated. In todays common day, things are very different. There is rarely a time when a 20 something with an officer rank, can lead 15-20+ year personnel. Just my 2 cents.
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Capt Retired
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I think this article is put together with random arguments that are based upon opinion and not reality. I can't even take the argument seriously enough to get upset.
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SPC Motor Transport Operator
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I agree with this completely
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MSG Toney Reese
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The Problem with the Army is it strict regulation on age. I join as an 18-year-old High School drop out. By the time, I was 35yrs old I had a Nursing License and a Bachelor's degree. I wanted a commission but, the problem was I was now 35yrs old. I had been to every leadership school for an enlisted person except the SMG Acamedy.I had Excellent EER's Pass every PT test and never had any disciplinary problems. Yet I could not become a commission, officer. Being a full-time soldier, student husband, and father had to learn how to multi-task. I challenged myself at every level and I failed at a few, but there was no quit in me. The only problem I had. I had to work hard for everything that I accomplished. However, the door to the opportunity for a commission was blocked because of age.
If I were in the Navy I believe I could at less become a LDO, and possible a regular commission officer. I believe the restriction or in place to keep Good Nco's from getting a commission. If you a leader your age should not have any importance if you can Lead.Your education is important, but it doesn't make you a leader either. I would far more want a mustang joining the ranks of the officer Corp because he or she know the rank structure by having that experience. I had several OCS, ROTC and West Point officers in my chain of command and I would without a doubt felt a little more comfortable dealing with officers who understood what it is like being enlisted. The Majority of them were fine officers and I worked with them on a daily basis.
A Good officer does not come from having a degree. You either have it or you learn how to become a leader. A degree only shows the board that you have the ability to learn.As for the Army, they are losing a lot of excellent NCO's who could be excellent commissioned officers.
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MSG Tim Gray
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I agree with your overall message with the following exceptions- enlistment criteria prior to my retirement in 2013 would allow an individual to enlist under an OCS option with a minimum of 90 credits. Not all colleges met the military's' accreditation requirements to include numerous High school diploma mills as required under education criteria.
I would also add that dedication of an 18 year old private to load up full combat load after 12 months of boots on the ground, far surpasses the dedication of any post graduate who had to find his syllabus after a frat party evening.
As I mentioned I agree wholeheartedly with the message you submitted.
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MAJ Operations Officer (S3)
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MSG,
Not every college graduate partied and went to a fraternity house, I went to college full time while raising a family and hold down a full-time job. Just saying.
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MCPO Roger Collins
MCPO Roger Collins
7 y
I see very little difference between a SM that has been selected for commissioning and the the Mustang. If I were on the selection board, the individual that worked to earn a degree while on AD, and equally qualified, the degree gets it. Of course, that's not considering experience in the field.
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PO2 Hospital Corpsman
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I'm about to finish my BA in Economics with a minor in Japanese from a brick-and-mortar school, and I can tell you right now that my degree will have nothing to do with being a Surface Warfare Officer; which is what I plan to become, and it has even less to do with being a Hospital Corpsman; which is what I am now. For me, getting a degree has always just an arduous and time consuming box to check off on my officer's package with no meaning at all to me. I'm not going to be a medical officer, and I'm not going to be a JAG, so it's beyond me how needing a degree should even be a requirement to begin with. John Paul Jones said Naval Officers should be of "liberal education", but what does that mean? I know a lot of people in college who are dumber than a box of rocks, and I know guys who dropped out of high school and are strung out on dope who are smarter than some of my professors, and somehow the navy would consider the brainless college kids I know to be more qualified because they have a worthless degree.
In all honesty, I think there needs to be some kind of a hybrid between OCS and a service academy, where you can receive the EDUCATION you need to do your job as an officer correctly but also get something you can use on the outside as well; like it would give you an AA when you get your commission or something along those lines. Either that, or we need to expand the CWO/LDO programs and have those programs flow into URL/staff career pipelines, so those guys can become COs and XOs like those in their communities who were commissioned through academies and OCS.

These are just my two cents and forgive me if I come off as abrasive. I've never liked school, and I'm salty about having to do more of it just to advance my career.
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