High School class of 2024

Kriegel2024

Banned
Joined
Aug 17, 2020
Messages
13
Good evening everybody,

I am currently a freshman at Riverside Military Academy and I want to go to USMA. I need help to get started early.
Any suggestions?
 
Good evening everybody,

I am currently a freshman at Riverside Military Academy and I want to go to USMA. I need help to get started early.
Any suggestions?
I have posted this all-purpose advice so often I just copy and paste it in now. You are wise to start your research early.

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.

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 college 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.

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 minimum active duty service obligation is.

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 medical 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.

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.

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:
There's no topping that. ^

I'm also in 2024, start to find sports that you enjoy, try to make varsity. I don't know what you're school size is, mine has around 150 kids per HS class. I'm on my LAX Varsity team. Eventually, I'm gonna become captain. Look into issues that you find important and reach out to organizations that help in the fight and try to get involved. Become President of clubs, become officers of clubs, any chance you get to show you're a leader, take it. There is a lot of helpful advice on YouTube on how to prepare for the app process, as well as articles. Make sure to read a lot about what you're getting into, because it's a lifestyle.
 
My addition: make sure your are doing things you enjoy. Not just “for the resume”. You also want to enjoy your best years, the high school ones!!

It’s also a good idea to touch base early with your advising counselor. Or career guiadance person. Or college advisor. Or whatever your school calls them. To let them know your intentions. They can help guide you, hopefully, in choosing a curriculum to best set you up for your goals.

And make connections with your teachers/administrators. Be the person that they want to recommend. They need to know you to recommend you.

Good luck!! And as always advised....have a solid plan B!! Yes
 
I teach high school in one of the top ranked districts in the country. Thankfully I don't have freshmen students. Ninth graders are junior high kids who showed up at the wrong building but we have to do something with them. I will say though that coaching freshman football a few years ago was a highlight of my time in public education. One of my players ended up at WP as the class president and first captain which has been held at the same time by only a few cadets in the history of West Point.

You seem different than most goofy 14 year old kids so I will encourage you to stay above the chaos of freshman year and resist the peer pressure that is inherent to that grade. Get involved in extra curricular activities. Above all else, hit the ground running and be concerned with your GPA from the jump. Develop relationships with your teachers as you will need letters of recommendation from them. Make sure your counselor knows you. Don't be a pest as they are busy, but introduce yourself. You are just a name on a roster but if they can put a name to a face, then when you ask them for a recommendation they will know who you are. Develop a resume. When my students ask me for a recommendation for college or a scholarship, the first thing I tell them is email me your resume. Take a career and technical education course in your junior or senior year after all your core courses are in the books. Take something that interests you and have a fun period and learn something other than the three Rs.

Above all else, enjoy high school because it goes quick. Work hard but take time to relax and develop your skills as a human. Times are different and crazy but the basics remain the same. We need leaders to keep stepping up and solving issues. Are you one of those?

My work email signature line after my name and credentials and whatnot has a last line that reads:

Imagine yourself...

That can be anything a student can imagine themselves being.

People say, "You can be anything you want to be." Well, that isn't true. There have been only 44 men who have been president of the United States. Before anybody says that the current president is POTUS 45, remember that one president served two terms separated by another man being president. That is an exclusive club as are many jobs. What you can do though is aspire to be what you are capable of. Be realistic in your goals, and above all else, work to achieve those goals within your abilities.
 
Back
Top