Today's Military:

Training and Skills

Darlene Anderson: I can say that the Military really helped him in his direction as far as his career path and what he would like to do for the future.

Louis Arroyo: If my son chooses to retire — I believe currently he’s thinking to retire at 20 years — so I’m sure by the end of 20 years he will be more than prepared to come into the civilian world and pursue whether it be logistics or whether he pursue school while he’s in the Service and maybe another career. But currently he’s looking at making a career out of the Marine Corps.

Norman Brown: Well, he wanted to go in the Army Reserve because he wanted to go to college, and he said, “Well, this way, Dad, they’ll pay for me going to school and stuff.” I mean, he really wants to, like, be an EMT. That’s what he’s going to school for, and he’s working hard at it.

Jayne White: His school is paid for. He just has to jump through some hoops as far as the paperwork, and most of the schools are pretty good about understanding how to fill out the paperwork.

Bill Fraedrich: He has been in school now three different times, but interestingly, since his engineering school requires a co-op program, he’s been able to count those schoolings as part of his co-op program. So he got paid for it. All his expenses were covered: living, food, everything, travel. Plus, he gets co-op credit in college. That’s worked out pretty well for him.

Beth Radiseck: Lindsay is at, in Monterey, Calif., at the Defense Language Institute learning Russian because she’s going to be a Russian linguist. She’s still in school now. She’s halfway through. She graduates in February, and then she’ll go to Texas for a couple months to learn how to be a linguist. She’ll have had her language — she’ll graduate with her language and an associate degree, actually, which is great.

Greg Brewer: He had been trying to procure a job in law enforcement for the previous three, four years, and after going the rounds and trying to get on in many different suburbs on many different police forces, it just finally kind of sunk into him that the military service, which he could get the security and police training from, was a viable option for him, and so he decided to go that route.

Dale Conjurski: Justin got advice from Chris saying, “If you’re going to be in the Navy, you’ve got to be in this program.” If you talk to people, you tell people your kid joined the Navy and they’re in nuclear, and everybody that knows it says, “Oh wow, that’s a great program to get into,” and even though their kids weren’t in the nuclear program they had heard about the nuclear program. Justin chose that because if you can get that test and pass that test you might as well go for the best.

Monique Morris: Because he is an accountant, he had to go to a lot of classes about learning about taking care of your own finances, so he got a car loan, so he has to pay bills. He’s a credit union member. Now he, you know, he has his own accounts, he pays his own car note and all that stuff, so I think financially it helped him a lot, too.

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