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I heard it was 8 active years for the National Guard. After I graduate from ROTC, I will have served 4 active years already, so will this mean I would only need to serve 4 more?

2007-03-25 11:57:09 · 6 answers · asked by dizzy_19832002 1 in Politics & Government Military

6 answers

It depends on two things - whether you were selected for active duty, and whether you were on a ROTC scholarship.

If you're chosen for active duty
Scholarship: 4 years AD, 4 years Individual Ready Reserve
Non-scholarship: 3 years AD, 5 years IRR

If you're not going active, then
Scholarship: 8 years as a drilling (and possibly mobilized) reservist in the Army Reserves or National Guard
National Guard Scholarship: 8 years in the Guard
No scholarship: 6 years as a drilling reservist/guardsman, plus two years IRR

AR 350-100, table 3-1; and CC Pam 145-4 lay out the requirements and have more detail

2007-03-25 12:43:13 · answer #1 · answered by dougdell 4 · 3 0

After graduation all ROTC cadets are required to fulfill their service commitment in the Active Army, Army National Guard, or the Army Reserve for an eight-year period. It is possible-even normal-to alternate the type of duty performed between active and inactive. You still have a 4 year commitment, but could server this inactive once your current service ends.

2007-03-25 12:08:54 · answer #2 · answered by Sailinlove 4 · 1 0

What, since when has ROTC been considered active duty service?

As a newly commissioned officer you have to serve 4 years active duty and 4 years IRR or you can fulfill your requirement by doing all 8 years on active duty services.

2007-03-25 12:19:54 · answer #3 · answered by BadKarma 4 · 0 0

I know after you graduate from college (and doing ROTC) and if you go into active duty you sing on for six years. I would assume the nat. Guard would be the same.

2007-03-25 12:04:19 · answer #4 · answered by heidi t 3 · 0 0

you will gets a commission on the 1st and fifteenth of each month or you may % to gets a commission on in simple terms the 1st. i would not connect the protection rigidity while you're actually not one hundred% beneficial that that is something you desire to do. by way of fact confident it is going to alter your existence and confident greater then in all likelihood you will get deployed and confident which will suck. you will connect bypass to worry-unfastened education then get to return domicile for in ordinary terms a sprint then you definately'll bypass off to the place you would be stationed after which you gets deployed come decrease back and bypass domicile for a quick mutually as then record decrease back to you accountability station. and you need to no longer spend all your money you need to hold on as much as you may so once you get out you may look after your loved ones, or your moms and dads, or your self, purchase you a house or something with that funds. That is going for any job you need to save and not spend. save for the flaws you desire and not spend on dumb issues which you do no longer truly want.

2016-10-01 11:47:34 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

You can't be serious. ROTC is not a service. You need not serve at all. Have a nice, if clueless, day.

2007-03-25 12:00:24 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 3

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