Yes, you are right, but this is how they work it. You pay about 4% of the total amount of college money you will recieve to the montgomery GI bill. I paid 1200 dollars, and my college money is up to 30,000. Now, the military is betting that the majority of service members who participate in the program will not go to school within those 10 years, and that is the reason it works . Just like a life insurance company is betting that the majority of their customers will not use the policy within the time period it is offered
2006-07-11 16:32:10
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answer #1
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answered by MCgunner 2
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Why did you wait 9 years? Seems like poor planning on your part. It is hard to start a new career the older you are.
My son is an Officer, so he will get his Masters Degree while he is in Army. They will make his assignment whatever university he chooses to go to. It even counts as part of his 6 years. He plans to stay in until he gets the little birds on his collar. Then he will have masters & the birds - great for career advancement. I thought the Eagle from his Eagle Scout would be his only bird. He is a couple of months from Captain. Use your college benefit before it expires. College opens doors.
2006-07-11 17:26:29
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answer #2
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answered by Wolfpacker 6
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Sounds odd, if you were in when the GI bill gave ten years to get involved with education it shouldn't have changed mid stream. For example out in 1975-------Gi bill for school ends in 1985.
In any case it's not a fair system . One man as posted below has stateside duty and goes to college while being paid by the service because he's an officer and another guy spends ten years trying to recover physically and emotionally from losing his arms and legs in a comabt zone. He's a private so that's how that goes.
2006-07-11 16:33:33
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes you should, but I don't really know much about military benefits. I attend an online university which has a lot of students who are presently in the military both in the states and abroad.
2006-07-11 16:26:34
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answer #4
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answered by Miami Star 2
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It would not paintings lately anymore. i surely had a military veteran from the Iraq warfare come confer with my classification. even as the warfare first all started, the militia became determined for individuals so he surely dropped out of highschool and joined to military. He were given his degree even as in there. yet that became decrease back in 05 or 06. because the militia is downsizing and we are not in warfare, that would not paintings anymore. i recognize it sucks, yet in simple terms end intense college and it will be a lot less complicated to affix. My brother had to get 15 college credit in simple terms to affix the Air stress considering he had a GED. MP is in the military btw. the in basic terms difficulty you are able to do is the in the back of time table get entry to software. You get parental consent and swear into the deptuntil you graduate. then you swear in again to be offically in the Air stress.
2016-10-14 09:23:27
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answer #5
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answered by ? 4
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You have 10 years from the time that you ETS to use the GI Bill. If you don't go to school, or request your money back, during that time, the government absorbs the money. The thought behind that is: "You didn't want it, we do".
You need to check with the VA, and get enrolled in school.
2006-07-11 19:07:09
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answer #6
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answered by My world 6
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It's been like that for years--a time limitation on the school benefits. You evidently weren't paying very good attention.
2006-07-12 05:35:43
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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no if you start to use your benefits and then quit your 10 years start the first day you use them
2006-07-11 16:58:32
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answer #8
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answered by jslewis81 2
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