ROTC Cadets paid to learn languages
I wish this would have been an option 10 years ago...I needed any excuse for more beer money.
Quote:
ROTC Recruits Paid To Command New Languages
By Aamer Madhani, USA Today
Desperate for officers who speak Arabic, Mandarin and other foreign languages, the U.S. Army is doling out monthly stipends to entice ROTC cadets in college to learn languages spoken in hot spots around the globe.
ROTC is offering $100 to $250 per month to recruits in the officer-training program who are willing to learn the languages spoken in Iraq, Afghanistan and other regions vital to national security.
The Army launched the program because too few troops speak the local language overseas, an issue that has surfaced during the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
"They will be better off as young platoon leaders if they have some language proficiency and understanding of the culture," said Maj. Windle Causey of the U.S. Army Cadet Command.
The bonus program began in the fall semester with 89 cadets willing to learn any of 10 critical languages and is sparking more interest. The incentive comes on top of partial scholarships to full tuition given to ROTC cadets.
http://www.usatoday.com/news/militar...anguages_N.htm
Agree that incentive "pay" for foeign language
for ROTC cadets is an idea whose time is past due. That said, I generally have a problem with the assumption that an undergraduate major is - or should be - a training program for anything (other than critical thinking). One example of short sigthedness is Schmed's comment about British literature. Some of the most insightful writing on cross cultural and transcultural interactions is found in English lit: for example, Kipling's poetry and prose (Kim, for instance), or E. M. Forester's A Passage to India, or Lawrence Durrell's Alexandria Quartet, among others. For those who think a Classics major is not relevant, I suggest reading Nataniel Fick's One Bullet Away and note his subsequent position at the Center for a New American Security.
Cheers
JohnT
In the "For what it's worth" department
the School of International & Area Studies (SIAS) of the University of Oklahoma (where I teach) has language programs in both Arabic and Chinese as well as quite a bit of scholarship money and ROTC programs from all services. It also has a large number of very good study abroad programs and opportunities - China and Japan, among others, come to mind.
If you happen to know any good prospective students from wherever, tell them to look us up as we are, IMO, one of the best kept secrets of American academia. (so much for the blatant commercial message;))
Cheers
JohnT
As an undergrad IR (interdisciplinary)
major and an apprentice (ABD) card carrying political scientist (with a large dose of cutural anthropology) I was assigned to the Pentagon as a current intel analyst (1LT). My education and training were very useful in my first real job.;) Since that time, however, political science has decided that its version of science must emulate physics and has gone overly quantitative and into something called "formal modeling" of things that have less than much utility in the real world. Research methods courses focus on statistics - particularly linear regression - but they tend not to teach the student anything about collecting data. The idea that drinking beer out of a single glass filled from a liter bottle and passing the glass after chugging it is a critical data collection skill in the Peruvian highlands is totally foreign (read drinking tea in Arab/Muslim cultures). Needless to say that back in the 1960s when I was a grad student, most political scientists did not think along those lines regarding the conduct of research but they did think in analogous terms of in depth interviews, surveys, etc. There was a recognition that sociel science had an element of art and that there was more than one way to skin a cat. Indeed, political science at Indiana U from 1964 - 1971 was an extraordinarily eclectic discipline with a definite applied (policy - making and executing - bent). All of that was excellent preparation for a career in intelligence, the military, or the foreign service as well as academia. Sadly, the narrow focus of many PHD programs has devolved on many undergrad majors. That said, (and I concur with those who have made this comment in different ways) the best undergraduate preparation for a military or naval officer is a solid Liberal Arts bachelor's degree that demands critical thought and a major that the student is deeply interested in. One of my most interesting Dartmouth classmates was a pre-med who was majoring in International Relations (interdisciplinary degree) - he became a highly successful MD.:cool:
Cheers
JohnT