Chances + advice. All and anything welcome

hopefull2022

usafa/uscga 26' applicant
Joined
May 22, 2021
Messages
102
Hello Guys, just wanted to get a feel for what yall think my chances are
11th grade
Academics :
1280 sat(retake in a week)
4.24 gpa
1/175 class rank
NHS
5 ap classes
Carnegie Mellon Alice challenge winner 2018

sports + extra curricular
basketball
- captain
- 2x section champs
- 4 year varsity member
- 3 year letter winner
track and field
- 2x letter winner
- placed 4th at county meet
- made districts placed 11th
AAU Basektball
Student council
overseas community service
part time job
camp leader at basketball clinics
Young kids basketball ref
 
If you look through these forums, there are many posts asking this exact question. You have quite an impressive resume, but there is no crystal ball to give you the answer you are looking for. Just put your best self out there in your application. Did you apply for AIM? Have you contacted the track and field and/or basketball coach about being recruited? Now is the time to talk to the people you would like to write your references. You want to have the required and optional ones. Think about why you want to serve in the Coast Guard, and be able to articulate that. The Academy website is a wealth of information. There are cadet blogs, videos of swab summer, and academic information. If you want to see class of 2024 stats, you can find them in a search of this forum I believe. Good luck!
 
If you look through these forums, there are many posts asking this exact question. You have quite an impressive resume, but there is no crystal ball to give you the answer you are looking for. Just put your best self out there in your application. Did you apply for AIM? Have you contacted the track and field and/or basketball coach about being recruited? Now is the time to talk to the people you would like to write your references. You want to have the required and optional ones. Think about why you want to serve in the Coast Guard, and be able to articulate that. The Academy website is a wealth of information. There are cadet blogs, videos of swab summer, and academic information. If you want to see class of 2024 stats, you can find them in a search of this forum I believe. Good luck!
Hey thanks for insight. What is AIM. New to all this
 
I’ve copied and pasted a compilation of standard advice below. Google is your friend. I cannot emphasize enough going to the sa.edu websites and reading through every page, link, menu item, as this is your primary source. There is also The Acronym List on SAF home page.
This is my standard advice, which I copy and paste several times a year.
——————————————————

You are at the right time to begin serious research.



The service academy application process itself tests for qualities and attributes desirable in future junior officers: attention to detail, executive planning and organizing, time management, task prioritization, humility, perseverance, patience. Take ownership of the process. Demonstrate initiative by researching the primary sources in detail. Take free advice from anonymous internet posts, including this one, with caution. There is no magic one-size-fits-all formula.



If you haven’t read every page, link and menu item on your sa.edu of choice sites, taking notes and starting to build out an extended timeline of action items and long-term due dates, now is a great time. That is your primary source, and most answers are there.



Do the same kind of research into alternative paths to commissioning, such as ROTC and related scholarships. That is a prudent thing to do, and shows no lack of commitment to an SA. Additionally, a college ROTC unit is another nomination source, if you find yourself re-applying after a SA turndown. There will be thousands of candidates building HS resumes with similar stats, plus college re-applicants; leave no opportunity unexplored. Presumably, your prime goal is to commission as an X officer, with USXA your preferred path. It’s not the only path. Re-applicants to SAs make up a chunk of each class.



Take this time to research all five of the Federal service academies, and subsequent career paths, so you can make an informed decision about ruling them in or out. It’s very important to look past the interim waystation of 4 SA or college ROTC years to see if there are at least a good handful of career paths you could see yourself doing for a minimum of 5-6 years or whatever the applicable minimum active duty service obligation is.



For those interested in a Navy career, don’t overlook the Navy Nuclear Power Officer Candidate (NUPOC) program and the Civil Engineering Corps (CEC) officer program (think SEABEEs). These are college programs with financial assistance, but no ROTC time commitment.



Go to your elected officials’ websites (2 Sen, 1 Rep), read and take notes on their service academy nomination process. They can choose submission deadlines, interviews or not, panel interviews, any method they want. If they are having a F2F or virtual info session, sign up and soak it in, so you are well-prepared for your cycle, even a few years out. Stay current with that site, in case the elected official changes.



Go to the DoDMERB site, the entity which does the physical qualification of candidates. Explore each menu item on the left. This often turns into one of the most frustrating and time-using aspects of the process. Get smart on it now so you won’t be surprised. There are some medications that must be discontinued for a certain period of time. IEPs and accommodations also are off the table at a certain point.



Research the CFA or applicable fitness test for the SA or program of interest. Assess yourself and develop a training plan. Women, learn to do pull-ups. It’s worth more points, and you will value that strength and confidence. Do not procrastinate when it’s your cycle. Leaving it too late invites illness, injury, bad weather, family emergency or sudden non-availability of your test administrator or video person, if that is required. There are YouTube videos on various techniques Google Stew Smith’s website and YouTube videos; he’s a USNA grad, former Navy SEAL, now a fitness pro.



If you are a non-swimmer or not a confident swimmer, take some adult swim classes at the Y or other program to get more comfortable in a pool. Though the SAs will teach you to swim to meet various required tests, you don’t want to spend precious time in remedial swim. It’s a good life skill anyway.



Here on SAF, read the Stickies at the top of the Nominations and DoDMERB forums. There is also The Acronym List on the Home page if you haven’t found it yet.



There is a Search function tool inside SAF, and Google works well when you include “site:serviceacademyforums.com” in the string. The same questions come up every year. The “Chance Me” and “stats” threads can be illuminating as to ideas for summer leadership programs such as Boys State and Girls State, and other competitive elements. The SA summer programs in your rising senior summer are worth looking into to get a feel for that SA.



There is no one cookie-cutter magic formula; a class is made up of individuals who bring different combinations of strengths.



If you are not involved in a sport, be sure you prepare well for the CFA to prove basic physical ability, and also ensure your other activities supply the leadership, collaboration skills, work ethic, time investment and discipline learned in a sport.



Don’t overlook the Senior Military Colleges (SMCs), which offer a military-type environment and structure, as well as paths to a commission. Some are only Army ROTC; some have Army plus other service ROTC.

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List of Colleges & Universities | GoArmy.com

The Army ROTC training program is held at select schools across the country. Visit goarmy.com for a list of these military colleges & universities.



Research the state maritime academies, which also offer commissioning programs.

Maritime Academies | MARAD

Studying merchant marine operations at the university level is a core component of MARAD's education strategy; particularly its essential responsibility to meet national security needs and maintain maritime defense readiness. The six maritime academies and USMMA meet that need by educating young...

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www.maritime.dot.gov



Create your organization system - binders, folders, spreadsheets, calendars, wall boards, whatever works for you to plan, track and execute. Many apply to multiple SAs, nom sources, ROTC scholarships, ROTC schools, etc.



Finally, stay flexible and open to the paths that open before you. The key is to show sustained performance, personal growth and achievement in a well-rounded person.
 
Last edited:
Hello Guys, just wanted to get a feel for what yall think my chances are
11th grade
Academics :
1280 sat(retake in a week)
4.24 gpa
1/175 class rank
NHS
5 ap classes
Carnegie Mellon Alice challenge winner 2018

sports + extra curricular
basketball
- captain
- 2x section champs
- 4 year varsity member
- 3 year letter winner
track and field
- 2x letter winner
- placed 4th at county meet
- made districts placed 11th
AAU Basektball
Student council
overseas community service
part time job
camp leader at basketball clinics
Young kids basketball ref
Impossible to tell. For all anyone on this forum knows they may as well give you advice on what lottery numbers to pick. Remember that selection is based on the whole candidate. We cannot tell how you will come across in your interview, we do not read your application essays.

Do the best you can and try and identify what separates you from all the others who will have a similar resume.
 
Start working on your essays now, your resume is off to the right start. Obviously, as others have said, none of us are admissions who can tell you your fate.

Stand out with your essays. Uniquely show through the experiences you’ve had how you’ll be an asset to the CG and the Academy, don’t just tell them you’re a good fit.

One thread here on SAF that helped me is: https://www.serviceacademyforums.co...-admissions-essay-feedback.68772/#post-679688. Lots more info on google or here in SAF that I’d recommend looking at.

Work hard this summer at your job and keep improving. Submit your application as early as possible, it’s rolling admissions, and ideally submit EA. The rate of applications submitted by applicants increases exponentially the closer to the deadline, so if you submit early you’ll stand out more.

Good luck!
 
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